Tag Archives: public understanding of science

Scientists learning to speak and engage

I’ve come across a couple of US projects designed to help scientists speak and engage with the public. The Scientist (online journal) highlighted an acting workshop for scientists led by Alan Alda (known for the MASH tv series, Woody Allen films, and as the host for Scientific American Frontiers tv series). From the article (you do have to register for free access) by Daniel Grushkin,

This is what happens when you cross doctoral work with improvisational acting: A line of fifteen PhD students face each other in an imaginary tug-of-war. “Make sure you’re all holding the same rope,” says Valeri Lantz-Gefroh, their drama coach and a theater professor at SUNY, Stony Brook. “You don’t want to hold a shoelace when the person in front of you is holding a python.”

The students are part of a daylong seminar on communicating science to non scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York. Prior to the imaginary tug-of-war exercise, they stood before each other and delivered short, off the cuff, introductions to their research meant for public consumption. Their talks were stilted and confused. Some swallowed their voices as they spoke. Others talked at the wall behind their audience.

Asked to describe their emotions during their presentations, one researcher complained, “It felt like I was almost insulting myself by dumbing it down.” Others nodded in agreement. The doctoral students were playing out Alda’s criticism of the science community. Alda believes scientists have been unable to make themselves understood by lay audiences. And as a result are failing to inform the public and policy.

A 2009 poll conducted by the Pew Research Center reflects Alda’s concern. Though the public ranks scientists third after military personnel and teachers in their contribution to society, only half of Americans believe in global warming and a mere 32 percent believe in evolution. Meanwhile, scientists complain that they’re not being heard. Half say that news media oversimplifies their findings, and 85 percent say the public doesn’t know enough about science. The numbers show a clear gap between the esteem that scientists hold in the public and the knowledge they’re able to transmit.

The other project highlighted by Matthew Nisbet at the Age of Engagement blog is a fellowship program for training in leadership and public engagement for scientists.  Pop Tech, an organization which focuses on social innovation and problem-solving ideas, is behind this effort. From the Sept. 15, 2010 posting,

PopTech is perhaps best known for its annual PopTech conference held every October in Camden, Maine. Called by Wired magazine a “must-attend for intellectual heavy weights…,” the conference features a line up of interactive talks by social innovators, scientists, researchers, and problem-solvers, with the goal of identifying new ideas and brokering collaborations.

PopTech … has announced its inaugural class of 20 Science Fellows. The fellows are early to mid-career leaders in fields such as energy, food supply, sustainability, water, public health, climate change, conservation ecology, green chemistry, computing, education, oceans, and national security.

The fellows were chosen based on their scientific credentials but also for their innate communication and leadership skills. As PopTech describes, the program is designed to provide the Science Fellows with long term communication and leadership training, mentorship, and access to thought leaders across sectors of society including those from the fields of media, business, social innovation, and education.

These projects provide an interesting contrast to the furor which greeted a paper that Chris Mooney wrote about scientists needing to pay more attention to the art of listening (my June 30, 2010 posting). I can certainly see how the acting class could lead to better listening skills (or paying better attention to your audience) but am not so sure about the Pop Tech fellowship project (a bunch of really interesting people getting together and getting excited means they tend to proselytize to the uninitiated for at least a short period afterwards).  Despite my reservations about the fellowship project I find these efforts encouraging.

Public understanding of science projects as prophylactic treatments

As I stated (in different words) yesterday, prophylaxis is one of the unspoken goals for a lot of these public consultation/engagement/understanding science projects. The problem is that you have to figure out how a group is going to react so you can make predictions.  The recent write up in Nature Nanotechnology (December 2008 online edition) featuring work from Dan M. Kahan, et al from the Cognition Project at Yale has a very interesting way of analyzing how people arrive at their opinions described in my posting here. These people suggest/predict that learning more about a science or a technology is not going to be helpful since opinions get fixed at an early stage and further intellectual input does not (according to their study) change things.

Presumably people would have behaved similarly (i.e. quickly establishing opinion after a minimum of input) on the introduction of electricity. There are a surprising number of similarities between the technology introductions of then (19th century) and now. If you want to look at some of the text from that period complete with dire predictions about messing with God’s work, there’s an excellent book  written by Carolyn Marvin called ‘When Old Technologies were New’.

We are able to predict some things about people individually and in groups but we don’t have a very good record. If we could do it well, every movie would be a financial success, every song would be a hit, and no scientists would ever have the projects halted due to public outcry.  More tomorrow.

Public understanding/engagement of nanotechnology in Canada?

There’s an interesting series of postings about public Understanding of science (it has a hideous acronym: PUS although I think some people are now using this one: PUoS). The main discussion starts with Richard Jones on his blog Soft Machines. Basically, he sums up the history of public understanding of nanotechnology in UK while providing some additional discussion and Andrew Maynard writes a ‘companion’ piece about the situation in the US. Both Jones and Maynard are scientists and advisors to various government and non governmental organizations. For the Jones material, go here and for the Maynard material, go here. I started with Dexter’s Johnson’s (IEE) comments about both postings here.

I am deeply jealous that there are programmes and interest in the UK and the US since there aren’t any here in Canada. We’ve done some of that kind of work in the area of biotechnology (much of it focused on genomics) but the nanotechnology end of things has been pretty much ignored, so far as I can tell. (Note: Quebec may be an exception. I have not scanned French language materials.) There is a National Institute of Nanotechnology but they don’t give out much information about their projects or their role for that matter.

it’s tempting to condemn the Canadian federal government and its policies regarding science generally and nanotechnology specifically but I dunno. Formal processes such as public meetings and forums and exercises are useful and can be quite meaningful but they will not obliterate the possibility of public misunderstandings, panic and hysteria, one of the unstated goals of public understanding or engagement in science.

The big panic that comes to mind is ‘frankenfoods’. That word which fused a pop culture icon emblematic of anxieties about science to concerns about food came to describe the whole of biotechnology. It’s a more complicated story as there a number of actors in the drama  but this is the short version and for a lot of people the word ‘frankenfood’ acted as a kind of shorthand. They didn’t have to understand the debates or any of the issues. We all do that sort of thing one way or another. There’s just too much information and too many ideas with not enough time and, sometimes, not enough interest.

‘Frankenfood’ was first mentioned in a letter to the New York Times. It was written by someone who has written many letter criticizing science and technology and there was no way to know that this time something different was about to happen.

I will continue tomorrow.