Team:Kyoto/HumanPractice

From 2010.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
m (Motivation)
m (Advantages)
Line 17: Line 17:
-
[ This is common Introduction article of participating universities of “iGEM Japan Human Practice”([[Team:KIT-Kyoto|KIT-Kyoto]], [[Team:Kyoto|Kyoto]], [[Team:Osaka|Osaka]], [[Team:Tokyo_Metropolitan|Tokyo_Metropolitan]], and [[Team:UT-Tokyo|UT-Tokyo]]).iGEM Kyoto has the responsibility for the wording. ]
+
[ This is common Introduction article of participating universities of “iGEM Japan Human Practice”([[Team:KIT-Kyoto|KIT-Kyoto]], [[Team:Kyoto|Kyoto]], [[Team:Osaka|Osaka]], [[Team:Tokyo_Metropolitan|Tokyo_Metropolitan]], and [[Team:UT-Tokyo|UT-Tokyo]]). iGEM Kyoto has the responsibility for the wording. ]

Revision as of 07:59, 26 October 2010

Contents

HumanPractice

Abstract

<On sentence summary>

Introduction

This year, we iGEM Japan carried out ”iGEM Japan Human Practice” suggested by iGEM Kyoto. In this project, we drove an attitude survey on genetic engineering and biotechnology cooperating with one another. We attempted to recognize the current situation, and we will take advantage of this result for future human practice activities.

Motivation

According to previous teams' results of human practice activity, which was a survey with questions about genetic engineering, more Japanese people chose "negative" or "neutral" than the other nationalities [1]. In addition, it is often said that many Japanese people hate or avoid genetically modified food [2]. We are interested in this tendency. Thus, we attempted to indicate the reason why many Japanese people have a negative impression on genetic engineering. We made a questionnaire below, asking about the impressions on genetic engineering and words related to iGEM, or Synthetic biology.

Advantages

  1. By cooperating with several teams to share the some steps of human practice activities, we can reduce the works but improve the quality of the survey result in terms of rich amount of the samples.
  2. We can lead more attention from mass-media by driving this activity as iGEM Japan, than as one university team. This will be a great help for many aspects, such as announcing the activities of iGEM, inviting sponsors, or further human practice activities.
  3. This project will be a good opportunity to deepen the relationships between each Japanese iGEMers. Actually, we are planning iGEM JAPAN project, which includes not only human practice activities but also construction of iGEM JAPAN Website, PR by magazines, participation in symposiums for example.


[ This is common Introduction article of participating universities of “iGEM Japan Human Practice”(KIT-Kyoto, Kyoto, Osaka, Tokyo_Metropolitan, and UT-Tokyo). iGEM Kyoto has the responsibility for the wording. ]


^Top

Methods

Five of the nine Japanese teams, KIT-Kyoto, Kyoto, Osaka, Tokyo_Metropolitan, and UT-Tokyo took part in this project. We all used paper-based questionnaire, but the places and terms are depending on teams.

We have conducted a survey from June 30 to September 26 in the places which are near the universities.

Targets, Terms, and Places

KIT-Kyoto
  • Students
    • July 12 - September 26 at Kyoto Institute of Technology University
  • Others
    • August 10 at Open Campus in Kyoto Institute of Technology University
Kyoto
  • Students
    • July 12 - September 26 at Kyoto University
  • Others
    • August 28, 29 at Masukata Shopping Street, Kyoto
    • September 4 at Grace Tanaka, Kyoto
    • September 11, 12 at Coop Shimogamo, Kyoto
Osaka
  • Others
    • August 10 at Osaka University from high school student or their parents
Tokyo_Metropolitan
  • Students
    • July 1 - September 26 at Tokyo Metropolitan University
    • July 30 - September 26 (Tokyo_Metropolitan team member’s friends)
  • Others
    • June 30 - July 2 in BIO EXPO JAPAN (http://www.bio-expo.jp/en/Home/) at Tokyo.
    • July 16 in Public Forum on Education Development Project at Tokyo Metropolitan University
    • July 18, August 20 in Open Lab at Tokyo Metropolitan University
    • September 18, 19 in Mitaka Science and Technology Fair at Tokyo
    • August 7 - September 26 (Tokyo_Metropolitan team member's family and acquaintances)
UT-Tokyo
  • Others (High School Students)
    • July 31 at SEG, a cram school, Tokyo

Questionnaire

We make 2 similar kinds of questionnaire.One is "Attitude survey of genetic engineering" and the other is "Attitude survey of biotechnology." They are almost same, but "Attitude survey of biotechnology" has a little different question from "Attitude survey of genetic engineering". We only change the word "genetic engineering" of the survey for "biotechnology" in order to make "Attitude survey of biotechnology."

And we attempt to indicate difference of image between "genetic engineering" and "biotechnology"


Attitude survey of ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )

  1. When shopping, do you buy "not genetically modified food”?
    • [ Always buy / Tend to buy / Hardly mind / Not mind / I have never seen such an indication ]
  2. What do you associate with ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )? (※Please encircle all that apply)
    • [ Clone / GM crops (foods) / Patent / DNA / Genome / Medicine / Cosmetic / Bioethics / Virus / Artificial Life / Novel Prize / Environment / Biological weapon / iPS cells, ES cells / Biofuel / Biohazard / Others( ) ]
  3. If there is no difference in effect, what do you think about using the drugs manufactured by ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
    • [ Not mind I use / Hardly mind I use / If possible, I don't want to use / I must not use / I don't know ]
  4. What do you think of the artificial genetic mutation by ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
    • [ Bad / Little bad / Little good / Good ]
  5. Which trend of information about ( genetic engineering or biotechnology ) is major, negative or positive?
    • [ Negative / About the same degree / Positive / No idea ]
  6. Do you think Japan actively tackles ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
    • [ Yes / Partly yes / Not so much / No ]
  7. Do you think the research on ( genetic engineering or biotechnology ) should continue?
    • [ Yes / No ]
    • If you answered [Yes], please encircle every fit reason from below.
      1. Because it may be useful for food crisis.
      2. Because it may solve environmental problems.
      3. Because it may solve energy problems.
      4. Because it may be applied to medicine.
      5. Because it may create a business opportunity.
      6. Because it can be used in the preservation of the species.
      7. Because it symbolizes the development of science and technology.
      8. Because it has already been put to practical use in many countries.
      9. Because it has many possibilities.
      10. Because it is interesting as an academic subject or research topic.
      11. Others( )
    • If you answered [No], please encircle every reason from below.
      1. Because it can create evil things harmful to environment and humans.
      2. Because products of it can be harmful to ecosystem.
      3. Because products of it can be harmful to human body.
      4. Because it is unethical.
      5. Because people say it is dangerous.
      6. Because it can be applied to evil use.
      7. Because there are not enough laws governing it.
      8. Because it can be replaced by other technologies.
      9. Because it seems to have less potential than other technologies.
      10. Because I feel somehow uneasy in using it.
      11. Others( )
  8. Have you ever heard the word, "Synthetic biology"?
    • [ YES / NO ]


[ This is common Method article of participating universities of “iGEM Japan Human Practice”(KIT-Kyoto, Kyoto, Osaka, Tokyo_Metropolitan, and UT-Tokyo).iGEM Kyoto has the responsibility for the wording. ]


^Top

Results

We drove this survey from July to September 26th.

Raw data: HumanPractice.xls

↑↓統合します

All data: [Human_Practice_Japan_allresult]

Our result is too much to write all on this page.So we write only graphs on this page and upload all result data. We analyze mainly following points.

  • compare with arts and science(*) in college student
  • compare with "genetic engineering" and "biotechnology"
  • compare in job
  • compare with college student and others


(*)In Japan, classification of arts and science is important, because the classification is a big factor to decide the subjects that are to be tested on the entrance examination for a university. So Japanese students study different things due to the classification during high school. We predicted that there might be some differences between arts and science.


Scale

Following is the scale of our survey(whole iGEM Japan.)<人数訂正あり>

Job
College Student
No. Arts or Sciences Genetic Engineering Biotechnology Subtotal
1 Arts 113 58 171
2 Sciences 296 110 406
0 No response 201 1 202
- Total 610 169 779
Other
No. Job Genetic Engineering Biotechnology Subtotal
1 Full-time House maker 114 0 114
2 Part-time Jobber 57 0 57
3 Student 41 3 44
4 Office Worker 161 1 162
5 Civil Servant 39 0 39
6 Self-employed 39 1 40
7 Managerial Position 17 0 17
8 Unemployed 34 0 34
9 Other 44 14 58
10 High-school Student 93 39 132
0 No Response 35 0 35
- Subtotal 674 58 732
- Total 1284 227 1511
Sex
Male 771
Female 702
No Response 38
Total 1511

Graph

1. When shopping, do you buy "not genetically modified food”?
  • [ Always buy / Tend to buy / Hardly mind / Not mind / I have never seen such an indication ]
Fig.1.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student.
Fig.1.2 This is comparison in job (without collge student).
Fig.1.3 Evasion index is an average when Always buy is 4 points, Tend to buy is 3 points, Hardly mind is 2points, and Not mind is 1point.
Fig.1.4 This is comparison with college student and other.


2. What do you associate with ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )? (※Please circle all that apply)
  • [ Clone / GM crops (foods) / Patent / DNA / Genome / Medicine / Cosmetic / Bioethics / Virus / Artificial Life / Novel Prize / Environment / Biological weapon / iPS cells, ES cells / Biofuel / Biohazard / Others( ) ]
Fig.2.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.2.2 This is comparison with genetic engineering and biotechnology. Both are collge student.
Fig.2.3 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


3. If there is no difference in effect, what do you think about using the drugs manufactured by ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
  • [ Not mind I use / Hardly mind I use / If possible, I don't want to use / I must not use / I don't know ]
Fig.3.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.3.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey.Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.↑グラフの色は訂正して周りのグラフと合わせます。
Fig.3.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey.
Fig.3.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


4. What do you think of the artificial genetic mutation by ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
  • [ Bad / Little bad / Little good / Good ]
Fig.4.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.4.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey.Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.↑グラフの色は訂正して周りの色に合わせます
Fig.4.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey.
Fig.4.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


5. Which trend of information about ( genetic engineering or biotechnology ) is major, negative or positive?
    • [ Negative / About the same degree / Positive / No idea ]
Fig.5.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.5.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey.Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.
Fig.5.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey.
Fig.5.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


6. Do you think Japan actively tackles ( genetic engineering or biotechnology )?
  • [ Yes / Partly yes / Not so much / No ]
Fig.6.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.6.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey.Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.
Fig.6.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey.
Fig.6.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


7 Do you think the research on ( genetic engineering or biotechnology ) should continue?
  • [ Yes / No ]
Fig.7.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey.
Fig.7.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey.Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.
Fig.7.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey.
Fig.7.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey.


  • If you answered [Yes], please circle every fit reason from below.
    1. Because it may be useful for food crisis.
    2. Because it may solve environmental problems.
    3. Because it may solve energy problems.
    4. Because it may be applied to medicine.
    5. Because it may be a new business.
    6. Because it can use preservation of the species.
    7. Because it symbolizes the development of science and technology.
    8. Because it has already been put to practical use in many countries.
    9. Because it has potential.
    10. Because it is interesting as academic.
    11. Others( )
Fig.7a.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [Yes] is 100%.
Fig.7a.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [Yes] is 100%. Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.
Fig.7a.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [Yes] is 100%.
Fig.7a.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [Yes] is 100%.


  • If you answered [No], please circle every reason from below.
    1. Because it can create evil things harmful to environment and humans.
    2. Because products of it can be harmful to ecosystem.
    3. Because products of it can be harmful to human body.
    4. Because I can't approve it ethically.
    5. Because people say it is dangerous.
    6. Because it can be applied to evil use.
    7. Because there are not enough laws governing it.
    8. Because it can be replaced by other technologies.
    9. Because it seems to have less potential than other technologies.
    10. Because I feel somehow uneasy.
Fig.7b.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [No] is 100%.
Fig.7b.2 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student and biotechnology survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [No] is 100%. Number of arts plus science is not equal to subtotal because subtotal contains number of no response.
Fig.7b.3 This is comparison in job (without collge student). All are genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [No] is 100%.
Fig.7b.4 This is comparison with college student and other. Both are genetic engineering survey. It is represented by proportion when the number of that the answer to Q7 is [No] is 100%.


8. Have you ever heard the word, "Synthetic biology"?
  • [ YES / NO ]
Fig.8.1 This figure is comparison with arts and sciences. Both are college student.
Fig.8.2 This is comparison in job (without collge student).
Fig.8.3 This is comparison with college student and other.


[ This is common Result article of participating universities of “iGEM Japan Human Practice”(KIT-Kyoto, Kyoto, Osaka, Tokyo_Metropolitan, and UT-Tokyo).iGEM Kyoto has the responsibility for the wording. ]


^Top

Discussion

^Top

Conclusion

^Top

Reference

  1. Darryl R. J. Macer, Ph.D., [http://www.eubios.info/AGE.htm Attitudes to Genetic Engineering: Japanese and International Comparisons], Eubios Ethics Institute 1992
  2. Masakazu Inaba and Darryl Macer, [http://www.eubios.info/EJ133/ej133b.htm Attitudes to biotechnology in Japan in 2003], Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 13 (2003), 78-90.
  3. Macer, D.R.J., Bezar, H., Harman, N., Kamada, H. & Macer, N., [http://www.eubios.info/EJ75/ej75h.htm Attitudes to Biotechnology in Japan and New Zealand in 1997, with International Comparisons], Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 7 (1997), 137-151.
  4. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10973213 PMID: 10973213] Macer D, Ng MA., Changing attitudes to biotechnology in Japan., Nat Biotechnol. 2000 Sep;18(9):945-7.
  5. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7765227 PMID: 7765227] Zechendorf B., What the public thinks about biotechnology., Biotechnology (N Y). 1994 Sep;12(9):870-1, 873-5.
  6. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16273712 PMID: 16273712] Ng MA, Takeda C, Watanabe T, Macer D., Attitudes of the public and scientists to biotechnology in Japan at the start of 2000., Eubios J Asian Int Bioeth. 2000 Jul;10(4):106-13.
  7. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11654983 PMID: 11654983] Asada Y, Tsuzuki M, Akiyama S, Macer NY, Macer DR., High school teaching of bioethics in New Zealand, Australia and Japan., J Moral Educ. 1996 Dec;25(4):401-20.
  8. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9062920 PMID: 9062920] Hoban TJ., Consumer acceptance of biotechnology: an international perspective., Nat Biotechnol. 1997 Mar;15(3):232-4.
  9. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9202112 PMID: 9202112] Europe ambivalent on biotechnology. Biotechnology and the European Public Concerted Action group., Nature. 1997 Jun 26;387(6636):845-7.
  10. [http://web.staff.or.jp/ STAFF] (2006)., Report of STAFF (in Japanese), available at: http://web.staff.or.jp/data/ivent/200603/20-2006032211531309821.pdf
  11. [http://www.cbijapan.com/ JMAR/CBI Japan] (2004)., "GMO" ni kansuru shohisha chosa (in Japanese), available at: http://www.cbijapan.com/d_investigation/2004.pdf
  12. iGEM 2009 - Team:Freiburg_bioware/Human_Practice/Ethics

^Top