Broer Tineke, Pickersgill Martyn, Cunningham-Burley Sarah
University of Edinburgh, UK.
Hist Human Sci. 2020 Dec;33(5):85-109. doi: 10.1177/0952695120945966. Epub 2020 Oct 21.
While parents have long received guidance on how to raise children, a relatively new element of this involves explicit references to infant brain development, drawing on brain scans and neuroscientific knowledge. Sometimes called 'brain-based parenting', this has been criticised from within sociological and policy circles alike. However, the engagement of parents themselves with neuroscientific concepts is far less researched. Drawing on 22 interviews with parents/carers of children (mostly aged 0-7) living in Scotland, this article examines how they account for their (non-)use of concepts and understandings relating to neuroscience. Three normative tropes were salient: information about children's processing speed, evidence about deprived Romanian orphans in the 1990s, and ideas relating to whether or not children should 'self-settle' when falling asleep. We interrogate how parents reflexively weigh and judge such understandings and ideas. In some cases, neuroscientific knowledge was enrolled by parents in ways that supported biologically reductionist models of childhood agency. This reductionism commonly had generative effects, enjoining new care practices and producing particular parent and infant subjectivities. Notably, parents do not uncritically adopt or accept (sometimes reductionist) neurobiological and/or psychological knowledge; rather, they reflect on whether and when it is applicable to and relevant for raising their children. Thus, our respondents draw on everyday epistemologies of parenting to negotiate brain-based understandings of infant development and behaviour, and invest meaning in these in ways that cannot be fully anticipated (or appreciated) within straightforward celebrations or critiques of the content of parenting programmes drawing on neuropsychological ideas.
长期以来,父母一直都能获得关于如何养育孩子的指导,其中一个相对较新的方面涉及到利用脑部扫描和神经科学知识明确提及婴儿大脑发育。这种方式有时被称为“基于大脑的育儿法”,受到了社会学界和政策界的批评。然而,父母自身对神经科学概念的参与情况却鲜有研究。本文基于对居住在苏格兰的儿童(大多年龄在0至7岁)的父母/照料者进行的22次访谈,探讨了他们如何解释自己对与神经科学相关概念和理解的(未)使用情况。有三个规范性的主题很突出:关于儿童处理速度的信息、20世纪90年代罗马尼亚贫困孤儿的相关证据,以及关于孩子入睡时是否应该“自行安定下来”的观点。我们审视了父母如何反思性地权衡和判断这些理解与观点。在某些情况下,父母运用神经科学知识的方式支持了关于儿童能动性的生物还原论模型。这种还原论通常会产生生成性影响,催生新的育儿实践,并塑造特定的父母和婴儿主体性。值得注意的是,父母并非不加批判地采纳或接受(有时是还原论的)神经生物学和/或心理学知识;相反,他们会思考这些知识是否以及何时适用于养育自己的孩子并与之相关。因此,我们的受访者运用日常育儿认识论来协商基于大脑的婴儿发育和行为理解,并以一种在直接赞颂或批评借鉴神经心理学理念的育儿项目内容时无法完全预见(或理解)的方式赋予其意义。