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Neuroprivacy in Arts and Culture

An evening symposium centering artists working with biosensors, developers building neural interfaces, and researchers studying cognitive liberty. Take part as we map the ethical terrain of our neural future!

Neuroprivacy in Arts and Culture

Friday, April 3, 2026

Doors: 6:30 PM

In-Person Event with Livestream Access

Seated Panel

View our FAQ page for more info, or contact us at [email protected] with any accommodation requests.

On April 3, Gray Area presents Neuroprivacy in Arts and Culture: a symposium convening experts at the intersection of bioscience and creative practice to discuss the looming implications of brain-interfacing technologies. As neural tech migrates from research labs into the consumer market, many fundamental questions about cognitive liberty and mental privacy arise with renewed urgency.

Neurosurveillance and neuroprivacy currently exist in a legal, social, and ethical gray area — a space of indeterminacy, where the line between right and wrong has not yet been drawn. From behavior-monitoring and prediction algorithms, to body-implanted hardware that connects directly to the nervous system, the curtain separating the most private, internal aspects of our lives is currently being drawn back. Who owns our brain data? What happens when our thoughts, emotions, and behavioral patterns become accessible to the government and corporations? Is there a future where neurosurveillance is outweighed by the capacity for neural tech to radically improve our lives? What can culture facilitators, researchers, and community members do to protect the last frontier of our sense of self?

In this one-night event at Gray Area, technologists, bioethicists, artists, and advocates of self-quantification will engage in a critical conversation with each other and the public about the cultural, ethical, legal, and political implications of the use of wearables and biodata-collection devices in artistic practice and research.

This rich and timely discussion will include participating speakers: Amy Karle, Barbara Nerness, Gary Wolf, Kim Old, Jaron Lanier, and Rhonda Holberton. The event is curated by Anastasia Chernysheva in partnership with Gray Area and EMOTIV.

Speakers

Partner

EMOTIV

Emotiv operates at the forefront of wireless neurotechnology, delivering accessible EEG systems, AI-driven analytics, and proprietary algorithms. When combined with one of the world’s largest and most diverse real-world brain-signal datasets, these assets enable the development of large-scale EEG foundation models capable of supporting a wide range of brain-state and cognitive-performance applications.
Founded in 2011, Emotiv pioneered the wireless EEG headset, the EEG headband, configurable wireless EEG cap, and the first in-ear brain wearables — democratizing access to valuable insights that were once confined to the laboratory. Supported by 21,000+ publications and used by 4,000+ universities worldwide, Emotiv’s technology platform is trusted by leaders in enterprise, applied neuroscience, accessibility, human performance, product design, and next-generation human–computer interaction. With a strong commitment to neuroethics, data privacy, and responsible innovation, Emotiv’s real-world brain data and insight capabilities are continuously expanding into new frontiers, discoveries, and use cases.
Their industry-leading platform has won numerous international awards, including the Red Dot Award, AutoVision Innovations Award, Australian International Design Awards, Australian Engineering Excellence Awards, and Edison Awards.

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