Biography
Syd Johnson is a philosopher/bioethicist/neuroethicist, a Clinical Ethics Consultant, and Associate Professor of Bioethics and Humanities at Upstate Medical University. She was formerly an Assistant Professor at Michigan Technological University, with a joint appointment in the Departments of Humanities, and Kinesiology & Integrative Physiology.
Dr. Johnson’s research is empirically-oriented and multidisciplinary. The two main foci of her work are Disorders of Consciousness, and sport-related neurotrauma. In her research on Disorders of Consciousness, Syd’s aim is to problematize current approaches to quality of life assessment, as well as research and treatment priorities in Disorders of Consciousness. This work has implications for several core problems in bioethics, including ethics at the end-of-life, the justification of research on vulnerable populations, and surrogate decision making. This work has potentially broad application to other vulnerable groups, including persons with dementia, infants, children, individuals with profound cognitive disabilities, and non-human animals. Her second area of research explores the ethical dimensions of neurotrauma resulting from sport-related concussion, in both youth and adult athletes. Sport-related concussion has been a subject of intense public and media interest in recent years, but it has been largely neglected as a topic of bioethical and neuroethical concern. This area of research is one where Syd has frequent occasion to interact with the media and the public, which accords well with her pedagogical mission to enhance bioethical literacy. She serves as a specialist reviewer of scientific research proposals related to concussion, mild traumatic brain injury, and PTSD for the Centers for Disease Control, and the Department of Defense.
At Michigan Tech, Syd is working to promote the integration of research ethics into science education, using the National Science Foundation mandate concerning Responsible Conduct of Research education as a platform to engage student-scientists as they develop tools for thinking about their work within a moral framework.
Selected publications
2024. Johnson, LSM, Fenton, A., Jensvold, M. The Three Pillars of Ethical Research with Nonhuman Primates: A Work Developed in Collaboration with the National Anti-Vivisection Society. Cambridge Elements Series. Cambridge University Press. (in press)
2024. Johnson, LSM. Philosophical, Medical, and Legal Controversies About Brain Death.Cambridge Elements Series. Cambridge University Press. (in press)
2015. Johnson, LSM. Sport-related neurotrauma and neuroprotection: Are Return-to-play protocols justified by paternalism? Neuroethics 8(1):15-26. (online June 2014)
2013. Johnson, LSM. Can they suffer? The ethical priority of quality of life research in disorders of consciousness. Bioethica Forum 6(4):129-136
2011. Johnson, LSM. The right to die in the minimally conscious state. Journal of Medical Ethics 37:175-178
Website
https://www.upstate.edu/bioethics/faculty-staff/fac_johnson.php