Literature DB >> 24780561

Neural imaginaries and clinical epistemology: Rhetorically mapping the adolescent brain in the clinical encounter.

Mara Buchbinder1.   

Abstract

The social work of brain images has taken center stage in recent theorizing of the intersections between neuroscience and society. However, neuroimaging is only one of the discursive modes through which public representations of neurobiology travel. This article adopts an expanded view toward the social implications of neuroscientific thinking to examine how neural imaginaries are constructed in the absence of visual evidence. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted over 18 months (2008-2009) in a United States multidisciplinary pediatric pain clinic, I examine the pragmatic clinical work undertaken to represent ambiguous symptoms in neurobiological form. Focusing on one physician, I illustrate how, by rhetorically mapping the brain as a therapeutic tool, she engaged in a distinctive form of representation that I call neural imagining. In shifting my focus away from the purely material dimensions of brain images, I juxtapose the cultural work of brain scanning technologies with clinical neural imaginaries in which the teenage brain becomes a space of possibility, not to map things as they are, but rather, things as we hope they might be. These neural imaginaries rely upon a distinctive clinical epistemology that privileges the creative work of the imagination over visualization technologies in revealing the truths of the body. By creating a therapeutic space for adolescents to exercise their imaginative faculties and a discursive template for doing so, neural imagining relocates adolescents' agency with respect to epistemologies of bodily knowledge and the role of visualization practices therein. In doing so, it provides a more hopeful alternative to the dominant popular and scientific representations of the teenage brain that view it primarily through the lens of pathology.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adolescence; Bodily epistemologies; Chronic pain; Clinical ethnography; Neuroimaging; United States

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24780561      PMCID: PMC4195807          DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.04.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  17 in total

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Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1999-05       Impact factor: 4.634

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Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2012-03

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Authors:  Victoria Pitts-Taylor
Journal:  Health (London)       Date:  2010-11

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Authors:  Fernando Vidal
Journal:  Hist Human Sci       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 0.690

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Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2011-12

7.  Rebelling against the brain: public engagement with the 'neurological adolescent'.

Authors:  Suparna Choudhury; Kelly A McKinney; Moritz Merten
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2011-12-30       Impact factor: 4.634

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Authors:  Susanna Trnka
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2007-12

9.  Brain talk: power and negotiation in children's discourse about self, brain and behaviour.

Authors:  Ilina Singh
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2012-10-25

10.  The social life of the brain: Neuroscience in society.

Authors:  Martyn Pickersgill
Journal:  Curr Sociol       Date:  2013-05
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  3 in total

1.  A consideration of the social dimensions and implications of neuroimaging research in global health, as related to the theory-ladened and theory-generating aspects of technology.

Authors:  Martyn Pickersgill
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2021-04-23       Impact factor: 6.556

2.  EEG-Brain Activity Monitoring and Predictive Analysis of Signals Using Artificial Neural Networks.

Authors:  Raluca Maria Aileni; Sever Pasca; Adriana Florescu
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 3.576

3.  Neural imaginaries at work: Exploring Australian addiction treatment providers' selective representations of the brain in clinical practice.

Authors:  Anthony I Barnett; Martyn Pickersgill; Ella Dilkes-Frayne; Adrian Carter
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2020-04-07       Impact factor: 5.379

  3 in total

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