Technological Excellence Requires Human and Social Context
Preprint, 2026

Breakthrough technologies increasingly shape social institutions, economic systems, and political futures. Yet models of research excellence associated with such technologies often prioritize technical performance, scalability, and short-term innovation metrics while treating ethical, social, and cultural dimensions as secondary considerations. This perspective article argues that such separation is no longer tenable. We propose a broader understanding of excellence that combines technical rigor with ethical robustness, social intelligibility, and long-term relevance. The rapid emergence of generative and agentic artificial intelligence further underscores this argument. As technological systems increasingly operate through language, interpretation, and normative alignment, expertise traditionally cultivated in the humanities and social sciences becomes integral to the design, governance, and responsible deployment of such systems. Drawing on historical examples and contemporary research practices, this article examines five interconnected domains where the humanities and social sciences, treated as integrated dimensions of research practice, can strengthen technological development: (1) ethical, legal, and social integration in agenda-setting and research design; (2) plural and reflexive foresight practices that shape technological futures; (3) graduate education as a leverage point for cross-disciplinary literacy; (4) visualization and communication as epistemic and civic practices; and (5) institutional frameworks that move beyond rigid distinctions between basic and applied research. Across these dimensions, we propose practical strategies for embedding interdisciplinary collaboration structurally rather than symbolically.

Author

Karl Palmås

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Science, Technology and Society

Mats Benner

Lund University

Monica Billger

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Architectural theory and methods

Ben Clarke

University of Gothenburg

Raimund Feifel

Institution of physics at Gothenburg University

Julia Fernandez-Rodriguez

University of Gothenburg

Anna Foka

Uppsala University

Juliette Griffié

Stockholm University

Claes M Gustafsson

University of Gothenburg

Kerstin Hamilton

University of Gothenburg

Johan Holmén

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Kristina Lindström

Malmö university

Tobias Olofsson

Stockholm University

Joana B. Pereira

Karolinska Institutet

Marisa Ponti

Learning, Communication and IT

Julia Ravanis

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Sviatlana Shashkova

Institution of physics at Gothenburg University

Emma Sparr

Lund University

Pontus Strimling

Linköping University

Fredrik Höök

Chalmers, Physics

Giovanni Volpe

Institution of physics at Gothenburg University

Quantitative Single-Molecule Microscopy to Advance Biomedicine

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2025-07556), 2025-10-01 -- 2026-03-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Health Engineering

Materials Science

Roots

Basic sciences

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Science and Technology Studies

Philosophy, Ethics and Religion

Physical Sciences

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

DOI

10.48550/arXiv.2603.10653

More information

Latest update

3/13/2026