“…It results from a focus not only on the understanding of the products and processes of science, a goal of scientific literacy, but also in the complex interactions between science, technology, society, and environment, allowing citizens' engagement in informed decision-making and problem-solving processes regarding SSI (Koster, 2010;Reis et al, 2020). These exhibitions are quite challenging for their curators because they must: (1) question the social, economic, political, and ethical impacts of scientific and technological proposals in visitors' daily lives; (2) raise questions, in-depth discussion, and critical thinking instead of providing correct answers; (3) provide contextualized information (e.g., the opinions of different social stakeholders regarding those issues); (4) invite visitors to actively develop their own critical perspectives and to share them with others; and (5) challenge visitors for collective problem-solving action on those issues (Cameron, 2012;Pedretti, 2004;Yun et al, 2020).…”