|
"Cool hues
on a head " by Susie Mallett 2002
|
I am so excited that I cannot settle for that one more sleep
so I have decided to post this blog from 2010 to get relaxed. After that I will try
a cup of tea and if that doesn’t work I will just get up and dressed and sit on my suitcase
and wait for zero-hour.
I wrote the following
blog just a couple of months before I attended my very first WCCE as a conductor,
WCCE7 in Hong Kong. I had been allowed as a student to come and go to the WCCE1
in Budapest but I had not felt very involved. I had never been to a congress
before that and I have attended very few since.
When a reminder came up a day or so ago
of the blobology blog I thought it worth a re-print. it seemed appropriate because of the the
last couple of paragraphs.
Here’s to a blobology
free WCCE9!
Saturday, 2 October 2010
Just a snippet for neuro-sceptics on brain-scams and
neuro-nonsence
I was freezing
having cycled here, there and everywhere between jobs in a fine, grey drizzle.
In the end I
jumped on a tram in an attempt to get warm. The tram-ride was not long enough
to warm me but it did mean that I got to my next appointment with over an hour
to spare. That is plenty of time for a slice of Grandma’s cherry, crumble-cake
and a huge milky coffee in the village café.
Warm and cosy
again I got out the English newspaper that I had stuffed in my pannier
just-in-case. Having read the Nature Watch on the tram, all about buddlia and
butterflies, or rather a lack of butterflies, in Scotland, I got stuck into
another Guardian Weekly favourite: the section on “Books”.
This week there
are several reviews that tempt me to buy. There are also a few more that are
interesting enough in themselves, but I do not feel that I need to own the
book. They impart enough information to learn something interesting, actually
more than enough, so I do not feel the need to have the book on my own shelves.
One such review
was by Wray Herbert from the Washington Post. He reviewed a book by Cordelia
Fine, a cognitive psychologist interested in gender and neurosexism. It was not
this subject that caught my attention but this paragraph:
“Fine
isn’t opposed to neuroscience or brain imaging but she is ardently opposed to
making authoritative interpretations of ambiguous data.”
There is an
awful lot of such interpreting going on these days; maybe more of us, including
me, should be more ardent in opposing it.
Fine uses her
detailed explanation of the technique of brain scanning using fMRI imagines to
illustrate her position of ardent opposition! Pointing out that they are not
videos of the human brain in action and are many steps away from being the
hi-tech gatherers of brain-activity data that some people believe them to be!
She describes
the pictures of head shapes with colours superimposed on them. She goes on to
explain that the colourless images measure the magnetic quality of the
haemoglobin (translated as the oxygen in blood that is being consumed in
different parts of the body) and not much more. If the scientists see something
on the image that is not as they expected it to be they “slap some colour on the regions of the map: hot vibrant
colours if it is more than expected; cool hues if less.”
Blobology
Blobology is
the name that Fine has given to the production of such colourful “works of art”
as produced by fMRI scanners and to the subsequent interpretations of them as
if they have something to do with human behaviour and can in some way justify
certain behavioural patterns.
Wray Herbert
the reviewer says that the mission of this book is to demolish sloppy science, “brain
scams” and “neuro-nonsence”. He tells us how critical and intolerant
Fine is of the intellectual leaps that are taken from analysing “iffy brain data” to making statements about
specific behaviours and using the interpretations as justification for them.
Fine does not
only criticise the use and interpretation of fMRI brain scanning but also other
so-called research that has a huge “scientific” influence on arguments about
human behaviour.
She illustrates
her arguments further by tracing the roots of neurosexism back to the
mid-nineteenth century. Then the political motives for pseudo-science were to
restrict higher education and the right to vote to the male of the species!
Apparently in 1915 six differences in the brains and CNS of men and women were
catalogued and it was claimed by neurologist Charles Dana that they proved that
women lacked the intellect for governance and politics.
Of course none
of this was true. Cordelia Fine is asking us to question if what is happening
now is any different to what the Victorian scientists were claiming. Although
their crude techniques have been replaced by modern scanners it does not mean
the interpretations are any truer.
Fine warns us
that once wrapping a tape measure around a head was considered modern,
scientific and high-tech. The "scientific" blobs of colour on an fMRI
head-like image could end up in the same intellectual scrap heap as the
Victorian's tape measure.
It is hard as
non-scientists to be as critical as we need to be, but we must be careful and
not accept as gospel all that we hear and read.
There are lots
of conferences coming up. Let us not forget these warnings from Cordelia Fine.
We must not let the blobologists fill our heads with "scams", "nonsense"
and "iffy brain-data"
produced by "sloppy science", telling us that
behaviour is about colourful blobs of warm and cool hues.
Notes
Cordelia Fine -
http://www.cordeliafine.com/
Guardian Weekly
24.09.10, Books-
Wray Herbert,
Washington Post -
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/10/AR2010091002678.html
1 comment:
Circle table icon of 3 sorts colour, black and white, outline. Roulette table multi coloured flat icons on round backgrounds. Included white, light and dark icon variations for hover and lively standing results, and bonus shades. 3d 1xbet isometric flat vector conceptual illustration of online gambling platform.
Post a Comment