{"title":"Testing Reflexive Practitioner Dialogues: Capacities for Socio-technical Integration in Meditation Research","authors":"Mareike Smolka, Erik Fisher","doi":"10.1007/s11569-023-00450-5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>To put frameworks of Responsible Innovation and Responsible Research and Innovation (R(R)I) into practice, engagement methods have been developed to study and enhance technoscientific experts’ capacities to reflexively address value considerations in their work. These methods commonly rely on engagement between technoscientific experts and social scholars, which makes them vulnerable to structural barriers to interdisciplinary collaboration. To circumvent these barriers, we adapt Socio-Technical Integration Research (STIR) for broader use within technoscientific communities. We call this adaptation: reflexive practitioner dialogues. While the primary aim of this article is to introduce and explain the methodological adaptation, we also analyze results from a pilot study with participants who are involved in research on contemplative practices such as mindfulness meditation. The analysis is guided by research questions that sought to assess whether and under what conditions the practitioner dialogues support reflexive and practical engagement with value considerations in participants’ work. The results indicate that reflexive practitioner dialogues can stimulate reflexive awareness of value conflicts and help re-direct decision-making responsively. We characterize the conditions facilitating such responsiveness as “value exnovators,” highlighting the oft-unacknowledged interpersonal relational practices that support collaborative engagement with value considerations. We suggest that “exnovation”—exposing the strengths of given practices for their improvement—can support R(R)I practices by directing analytical attention to their micro-level carriers.</p>","PeriodicalId":18802,"journal":{"name":"Nanoethics","volume":"208 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Nanoethics","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s11569-023-00450-5","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ETHICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
To put frameworks of Responsible Innovation and Responsible Research and Innovation (R(R)I) into practice, engagement methods have been developed to study and enhance technoscientific experts’ capacities to reflexively address value considerations in their work. These methods commonly rely on engagement between technoscientific experts and social scholars, which makes them vulnerable to structural barriers to interdisciplinary collaboration. To circumvent these barriers, we adapt Socio-Technical Integration Research (STIR) for broader use within technoscientific communities. We call this adaptation: reflexive practitioner dialogues. While the primary aim of this article is to introduce and explain the methodological adaptation, we also analyze results from a pilot study with participants who are involved in research on contemplative practices such as mindfulness meditation. The analysis is guided by research questions that sought to assess whether and under what conditions the practitioner dialogues support reflexive and practical engagement with value considerations in participants’ work. The results indicate that reflexive practitioner dialogues can stimulate reflexive awareness of value conflicts and help re-direct decision-making responsively. We characterize the conditions facilitating such responsiveness as “value exnovators,” highlighting the oft-unacknowledged interpersonal relational practices that support collaborative engagement with value considerations. We suggest that “exnovation”—exposing the strengths of given practices for their improvement—can support R(R)I practices by directing analytical attention to their micro-level carriers.
为了将 "负责任的创新"(Responsible Innovation)和 "负责任的研究与创新"(Responsible Research and Innovation,R(R)I)框架付诸实践,人们开发了参与方法,以研究和提高技术科学专家在工作中反思价值因素的能力。这些方法通常依赖于技术科学专家与社会学者之间的接触,因此容易受到跨学科合作的结构性障碍的影响。为了规避这些障碍,我们对社会技术整合研究(STIR)进行了改编,以便在技术科学界更广泛地使用。我们将这种调整称为:反思性实践者对话。虽然本文的主要目的是介绍和解释方法上的调整,但我们也分析了一项试点研究的结果,该研究的参与者参与了正念冥想等沉思实践的研究。分析以研究问题为指导,这些问题旨在评估实践者对话是否以及在何种条件下支持参与者在工作中对价值因素进行反思和实际参与。结果表明,反思性实践者对话能够激发对价值冲突的反思意识,并有助于有针对性地重新引导决策。我们将促进这种反应能力的条件称为 "价值创新",强调了支持合作参与价值考量的人际关系实践,而这些实践往往不为人所认识。我们认为,"创新"--揭示特定实践的优势以改进它们--可以通过将分析注意力引向微观层面的载体来支持 R(R)I 实践。
期刊介绍:
NanoEthics: Ethics for Technologies that Converge at the Nanoscale will focus on the philosophically and scientifically rigorous examination of the ethical and societal considerations and the public and policy concerns inherent in nanotechnology research and development. These issues include both individual and societal problems, and include individual health, wellbeing and human enhancement, human integrity and autonomy, distribution of the costs and benefits, threats to culture and tradition and to political and economic stability. Additionally there are meta-issues including the neutrality or otherwise of technology, designing technology in a value-sensitive way, and the control of scientific research.