[Press Release]
(この記事は英文のみでお読みいただけます)
Strengthening Asia’s role in global science communication through collaboration, education, and shared practice

A workshop session highlights the interactive and practice-based approach that defines the symposium. Credit: JSF
The Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Institute of Science Tokyo is proud to announce that it will host the PCST Japan Symposium 2025, to be held from 11–13 November 2025. This joint international symposium marks the first time the Public Communication of Science and Technology (PCST) Network brings a symposium to Japan, and the seventh conference of the Japan SciCom Forum (JSF).
The symposium will bring together researchers, practitioners, educators, and policymakers from across Asia and beyond to explore the strategic development of science communication in non-Western contexts. It is organised around two central questions that guide its themes: ‘how can we establish formal and informal education and training programmes in Asia to professionalise science communication’ and ‘how can we bridge the gap between science communication research and practice to engage with diverse audiences.’
Through a combination of keynotes, contributed talks, and interactive working group sessions, participants will co-develop ideas and recommendations that respond directly to these questions. The event will culminate in the production of two papers, each addressing one of the themes, to guide future policy and practice in science communication across Asia.
The symposium features two Big Idea keynotes. Professor Sujatha Raman, UNESCO Chair in Science Communication for the Public Good at the Australian National University, will open with a talk on science communication as an effort to ‘culture’ science. Dr. Asako Okamura, Senior Research Fellow at Japan’s National Institute of Science and Technology Policy (NISTEP), will deliver the second keynote, focusing on foresight and the future directions of science communication.
Post-symposium activities on 13 November will include the EurekAlert! Japan User Meeting and a series of skills-based workshops on topics such as responsible AI use in communication, institutional branding, avoiding hype in science storytelling, and integrating generative AI into public engagement.
“Hosting PCST Japan 2025 at ELSI underscores our commitment to advancing dialogue between science and society and to amplifying diverse voices from Asia in global discussions on science communication,” said symposium co-chair and Specially Appointed Assistant Professor Thilina Heenatigala (ELSI).
For more information, visit: https://www.japansci.com/conference/jsf25

Participants from previous conference engage in collaborative discussion on building stronger science-society connections across Asia. Credit: JSF