| Literature DB >> 30741364 |
Abstract
The emergence of Do-It-Yourself (DIY) science movements is becoming a topic widely discussed in academia and policy, as well as by the general public and the media. While DIY approaches enjoy increasing diffusion even in official research, different social actors frequently talk about them in different ways and circumstances. Interaction and negotiation processes amongst actors (e.g. policy makers and DIY communities) define the premises upon which different conceptualisations of DIY science are deployed.In this paper we offer a framework for analysing the discourse on DIY science.Our study consists of a field research of three spaces active in DIY science premises, two dedicated events of the DIY community, and an auto-ethnography in the field of DIY biology.By relying on the theory of social worlds/arenas (SW/A), we collected data on how notions of DIY science are constructed by different social actors and how conceptual borders are built or are likely to shift, resulting in multiple possible SW/A mappings. We conclude that each and every conceptualisation of DIY science cannot stand independently from the situatedness of its multiple contexts, therefore making its usage in policy making and governance particularly complex.Entities:
Keywords: DIY science; Social worlds/arenas theory; The maker movement
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30741364 PMCID: PMC6369552 DOI: 10.1186/s40504-018-0090-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life Sci Soc Policy ISSN: 2195-7819
Selected papers on DIY science
| Reference | Title | Year | Main area(s) of interest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chen & Wu, 2017 | The hot spot transformation in the research evolution of maker | 2017 | The Maker movement (review paper) |
| Tofel-Grehl et al., | Electrifying Engagement in Middle School Science Class: Improving Student Interest Through E-textiles | 2017 | The Maker Movement and education |
| Wexler, | The social context of “do-it-yourself” brain stimulation: Neurohackers, biohackers, and lifehackers | 2017 | Neurohacking and ethics |
| Lehr et al., | Communicating landscape hydrology — the water cycle in a box | 2017 | DIY approach to hydrological modelling |
| Berditchevskaia, Regalado, & Duin, | The changing face of expertise and the need for knowledge transfer | 2017 | DIY knowledge production and transfer |
| Brown, | If you want something doing, do it yourself | 2017 | Democratization of technology, quality control |
| Brown et al., | Evolving skills for emerging technologies: a collaborative approach | 2017 | Skill development in the context of archival studies |
| Vandevelde, Wyffels, Ciocci, Vanderborght, & Saldien, | Design and evaluation of a DIY construction system for educational robot kits | 2016 | Educational robotics |
| Lamore, | Fan cart: The next generation | 2016 | DIY and engineering skills in education |
| Sleator, | Synthetic biology: from mainstream to counterculture | 2016 | Synthetic DIY Biology |
| Sleator, | Diy biology-hacking goes viral! | 2016 | Emergence of DIY as a social phenomenon |
| Nguyen, | Make magazine and the social reproduction of DIY science and technology | 2016 | The Maker Movement |
| Bardaji, Sánchez, Simon, Wernand, & Piera, | Estimating the underwater diffuse attenuation coefficient with a low-cost instrument: The KdUINO DIY buoy | 2016 | DIY method for water testing, Citizen Science implications |
| Richards, | Shifting Gender in Electronic Music: DIY and Maker Communities | 2016 | The Maker Movement and ethics |
| Busch et al., | Citizen bio-optical observations from coast- and ocean and their compatibility with ocean colour satellite measurements | 2016 | DIY method for Citizen Science in the context of marine science |
| Fourie & Meyer, | What to make of makerspaces: Tools and DIY only or is there an interconnected information resources space? | 2015 | The potential of the Maker Movement in public libraries |
| Davies, Tybjerg, Whiteley, & Söderqvist, | Co-Curation as Hacking: Biohackers in Copenhagen’s Medical Museion | 2015 | DIY bio in the context of museums |
| Eggleson, | Transatlantic Divergences in Citizen Science Ethics—Comparative Analysis of the DIYbio Code of Ethics Drafts of 2011 | 2014 | DIY bio and ethical aspects |
| Yang, Patsavas, Byrne, & Ma, | Seawater pH measurements in the field: A DIY photometer with 0.01 unit pH accuracy | 2014 | DIY prototyping of spectrophotometric systems |
| Seyfried, Pei, & Schmidt, | European do-it-yourself (DIY) biology: Beyond the hope, hype and horror | 2014 | DIYbio in European Citizen Science |
| Mereu & Villarroel, | Visions Project K.1: DIY 3-D interactive videohologram device | 2014 | Prototyping of a 3D video application |
| Fortunati, Esposito, Ferrin, & Viel, | Approaching Social Robots Through Playfulness and Doing-It-Yourself: Children in Action | 2014 | Learning by doing in school |
| Strickland, | Brain hacking: Self-experimenters are zapping their heads | 2014 | Neurohacking and ethics |
| Landrain, Meyer, Perez, & Sussan, | Do-it-yourself biology: Challenges and promises for an open science and technology movement | 2013 | DIYbio and ethics |
| Delgado, | DIYbio: Making things and making futures | 2013 | DIYbio vs instutionalized biology |
| Buechley & Perner-Wilson, | Crafting technology: Reimagining the processes, materials, and cultures of electronics | 2012 | Survey study on DIY electronics practices |
| Rennie, Evans, Mayne, & Rennie, | Factors affecting the use and outcomes of interactive science exhibits in community settings | 2010 | Citizen Engagment in science |
| Kelty, | Outlaw, hackers, victorian amateurs: Diagnosing public participation in the life sciences today | 2010 | Citizen Engagment in science |
| Wan, Wu, & Chen, | Application of program generation technology in solving heat and flow problems | 2007 | DIY approaches in thermal science |
Visited spaces
| # | Characteristics | Main focuses |
|---|---|---|
| Space 1 | Located inside a university campus and therefore under the direct responsibility of the faculty. Small space, well equipped with 3d printing and other technologies for prototyping. Open to the faculty students only, under the direction of one senior member | Design, architecture, prototyping, workshops organization |
| Space 2 | Big independent collaborative hub that includes sub-spaces (among which a Fablab and a DIY bio lab) that host activities of art, technology, and science. Open to everyone and ruled by a member board | DIY culture, collaborative economy, sustainability |
| Space 3 | Supported by the local association of handicraft industry (national funds), particularly focused on providing assistance and tools for entrepreneurship. Additional on-demand services | 3D printing, start-up business, prototyping |
Attended events
| # | Characteristics | Main focus |
|---|---|---|
| Event 1 | European reference event of the Maker Movement. Participants showcase their projects and engage among themselves and with the visitors. | Arts, crafts, engineering, science, DIY culture |
| Event 2 | Principal event of an international NGO. Gathers innovators, entrepreneurs, tech enthusiasts and scientists around specific themes that are discussed in talks and plenary discussions. | Collaborative economy, creativity, fairness, openness and trust |
Auto-ethnography stages
| # | Experiment stage | Main objective |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Feasibility study | A feasibility study on the application if DIY method for food quality assessment |
| 2 | Identification of possible areas of application | Review of scientific literature on a selection of applicative cases (detection of nitrites/nitrates through semi quantitative colour-based spectrophotometry, UV and IR Arduino-based spectrophotometry) |
| 3 | Hands on testing | Prototyping of different practical possibilities. Fig. |
| 4 | Collection and analysis of results and actors ‘interactions | Data collection (oral and written communications with actors, online and offline material) |
aSee e.g. http://www.lamotte.com/en/food-beverage/test-strips/2996.html. Retrieved 12/10/2018
Fig. 1“Arduino based prototype for automatic test strip reading”. A TCS3200 colour sensor in a controlled dark room is employed to read commercially available test strips. Copyright of the author
Actors and actions
| Actor | Phase | Context(s) | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Hacker movement, Citizen Science | Development and study of new forms of public participation in research - Use of open source software for ‘gamification’ as a strategy to engage citizens in projects around local challenges (e.g. disease mapping) – Training and public events participation with a focus on open source and citizen science |
| 2 | 1 | Entrepreneurship | Launch of a start-up aimed at assessing and distributing ‘value’ in a specific ecosystem according to principles of share, collaboration and open source – Strong participation to discussions, panels, and public talks on the themes of collaboration |
| 3 | 1 | Private consultancy | Private consultancy in the field of automation, artificial intelligence, the future of manufacturing, the Maker Movement – Editing of reports and publication on these themes |
| 4 | 1 | Maker Movement, Academia | Direction of a Fablab located inside the faculty of design of a university – organisation of European events on the Maker Movement – Assistance to students at various prototyping phases of their projects and research |
| 5 | 1 | Maker Movement | Direction of a makerspace, organization of more projects (even institutionally funded) on open source applied to the contexts of fabrication, design, health – Technical workshop organisation |
| 6 | 1 | Maker Movement, Entrepreneurship | Direction of a Fablab designed as a provider of open source technology to local enterprises that are registered to the association – Active participation to workshops and seminars - Drafting of open calls for public funding |
| 7 | 1 | Bio Hacking | Management of many ventures in the field of decentralized networks and innovation. Self-experimentation with human enhancement techniques and biohacking – Online sharing of outcomes and data |
| 8 | 2 | DIY biology | Participation to hackerspace’s activity in the field of DIYbio with major interest on personal projects development – Events organisation in Academia with the scope of informing scientists about the DIY bio community - Online sharing of outcomes and data |
| 9 | 2 | Institutional Research | Research in biology and food contaminants in a public research centre – Personal intellectual interest in DIY applications and emerging technologies – Scientific support to policy making |
| 10 | 2 | DIY biology | Coordination of online community concerned with the development of software and hardware for a variety of projects put forward by the community (e.g. air quality sensing, optics and imaging, mobile spectrometry) |
| 11 | 2 | Institutional Research | Conduction of a reference laboratory for food analysis located inside a public research centre - Private experimentation with DIY technologies |
Social worlds
| SW | Commitments | Self-Descriptions of the SW (readapted from actors’phrasing) | Relations with other SWs | Actions and | Site of actions and/or organizations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 Maker Movement | -Democratization of productive processes | “A culture based on a different set of values” | -Citizen Science | -Sharing of spaces, resources and technology | -Fablabs, makerspaces |
| #2 Hacker Movement | -Democratization of software | “Similar to the Maker Movement but totally non-institutionalized. Fablabs are not the hacker movement” | -Maker Movement | -Programming | -Virtual spaces |
| #3 Bio Hacking | -Enhancement of self being | “Playing the doctor of yourself” | -DIY bio | -Body modification | -Online communities |
| #4 DIY Bio | -Sharing of knowledge and resources for research in biology | “Conducting experiment out of the lab for specific purposes and even for fun” | -Bio Hacking | -Experiments and trials set up | -Hackerspaces |
| #5 Citizen Science | -Citizen participation to science activities | “Bottom up scientific initiatives to tackle local or community problems” | -Maker Movement | -Sharing of spaces, resources and technology | -Makerspaces and Fablabs |
| #6 Entre- | -Production of innovation | “Capitalization of DIY approaches for business purposes” | -DIY bio | -Use of new technologies and emerging communities for private business | -Makerspaces, Fablabs and hackerspaces |
Criteria to brainstorm about arenas (See Clarke, 2003 p. 124)
| • Around the chosen arena, no major social worlds have appeared | |
| Our literature review shows multiple perspectives over the DIY science phenomenon, as well as its multi-faceted intrinsic nature. DIY science contains different actors and collectives that respond to different cultures and practices. No actors at both research phases stressed the prevalence of any SW against others. | |
| • Historically, we have a sense of the changes that have interested the arena at stake | |
| Many aspects have characterized the latest developments of various instances of DIY science (e.g. new technologies such as 3d printing), which can therefore be considered a further development of an already existing phenomenon | |
| • Social worlds can in turn be deconstructed in arenas | |
| We think this could be the case of DIY biology or other SWs within DIY science (e.g. IT hacking, the Maker Movement, etc.). We explore this possibility by offering two distinct possibilities of mapping. |
Fig. 2“Map 1- The Maker Movement Arena” Map 1 is obtained from conceptualizing the Maker Movement as a social arena. The constitutive elements in the figure have been produced along the working suggestion in Clarke (2003)
Fig. 3“Map 2- The DIY Science Arena” Map 2 is obtained from conceptualizing the DIY science as a social arena. The constitutive elements in the figure have been produced along the working suggestions in Clarke (2003)