Fechtel Hannah, Ruiz Sienna, Spray Julie, Waters Erika A, Shepperd James, Hunleth Jean
Washington University School of Medicine, Department of Surgery - Public Health Sciences, Saint Louis, MO, USA.
University of Florida, Department of Psychology, 945 Center Dr, Gainesville, FL, USA 32603.
Int J Soc Res Methodol. 2024;27(5):575-588. doi: 10.1080/13645579.2023.2231756. Epub 2023 Jul 3.
Virtual technologies gained popularity during the COVID-19 pandemic for use in research, including research with children. As scholarship from the field of science, technology and society (STS) suggests, technologies are never neutral, but embedded with social values and, as such, used by people to navigate identities and relationships. Building on childhood studies research that has shown how children appropriate and use research tools, this article asks: How do child research participants use this virtual "window" into their homes and their lives? Using observations from a virtual and in-person study in the United States, we show how children used virtual technologies to manage relationships, filter what researchers saw of their lives, and navigate issues of privacy and self-disclosure. We conclude that analysing children's interactions with research technologies offers important indicators to guide researchers attending to ethical issues of power for both in-person and virtual research with children.
在新冠疫情期间,虚拟技术在包括儿童研究在内的研究中得到了广泛应用。正如科学、技术与社会(STS)领域的学术研究表明的那样,技术绝非中立,而是蕴含着社会价值观,因此人们利用技术来塑造身份认同和人际关系。基于儿童研究领域的研究成果,即儿童如何理解并使用研究工具,本文提出问题:儿童研究参与者如何利用这个通向他们家庭和生活的虚拟“窗口”?通过对美国一项虚拟和实地研究的观察,我们展示了儿童如何利用虚拟技术来管理人际关系、筛选研究人员对其生活的观察内容,以及应对隐私和自我披露问题。我们得出结论,分析儿童与研究技术的互动为指导研究人员关注儿童实地研究和虚拟研究中的权力伦理问题提供了重要指标。