We worked closely with our partners on the Internet of Brains (IoB)
Science Communication team to translate the cards into Japanese and refine them for local use. Building on the original workshop format, we iterated the scenarios across repeated expert sessions, and updated the visuals as GenAI image capabilities improved, allowing for more photorealistic technology cards. The updated technology cards carried forward design elements from earlier versions created by Emily Maletz for the NISE Network, while expanding the set with new scenarios shaped by workshop results and conversations with experts in Japan.
Neu World, an IoB program that uses sci-fi manga co-created by researchers and creators to explore possible futures, also shaped the new cards we added. In particular, the memory scenario on this page draws from Neu World’s manga ‘.raw,’ set in 2050. In the story, an artist is asked to use BMI technology to recreate a landscape her grandfather once saw, a place that no longer exists.
Reflecting on the card raises questions about memory, authenticity, consent, and what it means to “recreate” an experience for someone else. When we add a provocation about overuse, the discussion often goes somewhere unexpected, shifting from personal benefit into questions of pressure, misuse, and who gets to decide what should be shared.
No matter the setting, whether in an IoNx workshop or a hackathon, the cards help create a safe space for cross-disciplinary dialogue, where participants can surface shared values and build ethical reflection into how future neurotechnologies are imagined and designed.