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Breheny M, Ross I, Ladyman C, Signal L, Dew K, Gibson R. "It's Just [Complicated] Sleep": Discourses of Sleep and Aging in the Media. THE GERONTOLOGIST 2023; 63:1591-1601. [PMID: 37191628 PMCID: PMC10724049 DOI: 10.1093/geront/gnad058] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/15/2023] [Indexed: 05/17/2023] Open
Abstract
The media are influential in shaping beliefs and attitudes on aging and health-related behaviors. Sleep is increasingly recognized as a key pillar for healthy aging. However, the role of media representations of sleep is yet to be assessed with regard to discourses of aging. Texts from New Zealand's main free online news source were collated using key words "sleep" together with "aging," "older," "elderly," or "dementia" between 2018 and 2021. Contents of 38 articles were interpreted using critical discourse analysis. Discursive constructions described an inevitable decline of sleep with aging, including impacts of both physiological decline and life stage transitions; sleep's role as both a remedy and risk for ill health and disease; and the simplification of solutions for self-managing sleep juxtaposed alongside recognition of its complexity. The audience of these complex messages is left in the invidious position of both pursuing sleep practices to prevent age-related decline, whilst also being told that sleep degradation is inevitable. This research demonstrates the complexity of media messaging and the fraught options it offers: good sleep as both a reasonable achievement to strive for and as impossibly idealistic. Findings mirror two predominant health identities available to older people, as responsible for resisting aging or as falling into inevitable decline. This reveals additional expectations around appropriate time use and behaviors with aging. More nuanced messaging that goes beyond sleep as a resource for health and waking productivity is recommended. Acknowledging the complexity of sleep, aging, and society could be the starting point of such adaptation.
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Affiliation(s)
- Mary Breheny
- School of Health, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand
| | - Isabelle Ross
- Sleep/Wake Research Centre, School of Health Sciences, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand
| | - Clare Ladyman
- Sleep/Wake Research Centre, School of Health Sciences, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand
| | - Leigh Signal
- Sleep/Wake Research Centre, School of Health Sciences, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand
| | - Kevin Dew
- School of Social and Cultural Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand
| | - Rosemary Gibson
- Sleep/Wake Research Centre, School of Health Sciences, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand
- School of Psychology, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand
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2
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Neves BB, Wilson J, Sanders A, Kokanović R, Burns K. "Live Gerontology": Understanding and Representing Aging, Loneliness, and Long-Term Care Through Science and Art. THE GERONTOLOGIST 2023; 63:1581-1590. [PMID: 37354206 PMCID: PMC10724046 DOI: 10.1093/geront/gnad080] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/20/2022] [Indexed: 06/26/2023] Open
Abstract
This article proposes an expansive conceptualization of gerontological research by engaging with a "live gerontology" that combines sciences and arts to better understand and represent aging and its diverse meanings and contexts. Borrowing the sociological concept of "live methods," we argue that gerontology can benefit from a "live" approach-not only methodologically, but also conceptually. To guide pathways between artistic and gerontological fields and frame its practices and outcomes, we suggest four propositions for a live gerontology: (1) using multiple genres to artfully connect the whole-interweaving micro-, meso-, and macrolevels to contextualize aging within various sociocultural milieus; (2) fostering the use of the senses to capture more than just what people say-what they do, display, and feel; (3) enabling a critical inventiveness by relying on arts' playfulness to design/refine instruments; and (4) ensuring a constant reflection on ethics of representation and public responsibility. To apply and experiment with a live gerontological approach, we describe collaborations with an award-winning writer and an illustrator. The collaborations drew on qualitative data from a study on lived experiences of loneliness in long-term care through ethnography and interviews with residents of 2 Australian facilities. The writer explored participants' accounts as creative stories, which were then illustrated. Motivated by an ethics of representation, we aimed to represent findings without othering or further marginalizing participants. The creative materials offered more than appealing representations, shining new light on the intricate nature of aging, loneliness, institutionalization, and gerontology research and practice.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Josephine Wilson
- English and Creative Arts, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
| | - Alexandra Sanders
- School of Social Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia
| | - Renata Kokanović
- Social and Global Studies Center, RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
| | - Kate Burns
- School of Social Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia
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3
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Samanta T. Social egg freezing as ambivalent materialities of aging. J Aging Stud 2023; 67:101183. [PMID: 38012943 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2023.101183] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/28/2023] [Revised: 09/11/2023] [Accepted: 09/20/2023] [Indexed: 11/29/2023]
Abstract
This commentary explores how the material-nonmaterial transactions around reproduction among women raise paradoxical questions of reproductive autonomy and commercialization of reproduction. Drawing from medical anthropological studies on human reproduction, the technology around social egg freezing has been conceived to proffer ambivalent possibilities of hope, despair, and repair as mature women recalibrate their reproductive identities, especially in pronatalist contexts. Building on the material-discursive critique of the 'material turn', I ask if social egg freezing offers an empowering biological reprieve for women who have 'chosen' a non-normative (i.e., a departure from heterosexual conjugality) life-course. Subsequently, how does one "do age" when material entanglements (here, reproductive technologies) disrupt the symbolic performance of the life-course? Or, does this reproductive autonomy actualized through social egg freezing align well with the neoliberal prerogatives of "successful aging," thereby intensifying the specter of the "Third Age"? Overall, through an analysis of (reproductive) technologies, as well as the question of choice and social bodies, I argue how new materialities and anxieties of growing old can undergird the material-cultural link in gerontology.
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Affiliation(s)
- Tannistha Samanta
- Department of Sociology, FLAME School of Liberal Education, FLAME University, Pune 412115, India.
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4
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Leibing A, Lazzaroni C, Petersen N. Emerging Technologies for Preventing the 'New' Dementia: Ambiguous Optimism in the Canadian Context. Med Anthropol 2023; 42:607-622. [PMID: 37552820 DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2023.2244649] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 08/10/2023]
Abstract
Experts' views on the use of mostly digital technologies for dementia prevention are characterized by a simultaneity of "gerontechnological optimism" and skeptical hesitancy. Despite the hope for progress in dementia prevention through preventive technologies, experts also point to the complexity of prevention, the importance of environmental factors and public health policies, and the danger of an excessive focus on individual interventions. Without questioning the positive impact such technologies can have on many people, we claim that the experts' ambiguity reveals a deeper concern, a kind of "cruel optimism" that is based on a fantasy of "supported autonomy".
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Affiliation(s)
- Annette Leibing
- Faculty of Nursing, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada
| | - Cynthia Lazzaroni
- Department Social Studies of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
| | - Niklas Petersen
- Institute of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, University of Göttingen, Gottingen, Germany
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5
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Marston HR, Ivan L, Rosenberg D, Ratzenboeck B. Editorial: Post-pandemic digital realities of older adults. Front Psychol 2023; 14:1275257. [PMID: 37701874 PMCID: PMC10494437 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1275257] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/09/2023] [Accepted: 08/15/2023] [Indexed: 09/14/2023] Open
Affiliation(s)
- Hannah R. Marston
- School of Health, Wellbeing and Social Care, The Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
| | - Loredana Ivan
- Department of Communication, The National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania
| | - Dennis Rosenberg
- Israel Gerontological Data Center, The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
- Department of Human Services, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel
- Center of Excellence in Research on Ageing and Care, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland
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6
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Creaney R, Currie M, Reid L. Digital life as a cabaret, old chum: A dramaturgical analysis of older digitalised home residents and their wider caring networks. J Aging Stud 2023. [DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2023.101129] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/29/2023]
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7
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Gallistl V, Katz S, Kolland F, Peine A. Editorial: Socio-gerontechnology-New perspectives on the digital transformation of later life. FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY 2023; 8:1183572. [PMID: 37066065 PMCID: PMC10102660 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2023.1183572] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/10/2023] [Accepted: 03/17/2023] [Indexed: 06/19/2023]
Affiliation(s)
- Vera Gallistl
- Division Gerontology and Health Research, Department General Health Studies, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Krems an der Donau, Austria
| | - Stephen Katz
- Sociology Department, Trent University, Peterborough, ON, Canada
| | - Franz Kolland
- Division Gerontology and Health Research, Department General Health Studies, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Krems an der Donau, Austria
| | - Alexander Peine
- Department of Cultural Studies, Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, Netherlands
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Kamp A, Grosen SL, Hansen AM. Tinkering with (in)visibilities: Caring for older people with surveillance technologies. SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS 2023; 45:605-622. [PMID: 36639830 DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13606] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/11/2021] [Accepted: 12/16/2022] [Indexed: 06/17/2023]
Abstract
New surveillance technologies have in later years been introduced in care for older people as part of a broader policy agenda of 'sustainable' welfare state retrenchment, promoting ideals of self-sufficiency and empowerment of older people 'ageing in place'. Drawing on newer approaches to surveillance studies, this article explores care workers' active labour in creating (in)visibility in a complex and ongoing process of tinkering, while negotiating political rationales of empowerment and professional accountability. Hence, visibilities are conceived as coded, reflecting different ideals and rationales. Based on extensive fieldwork in Danish eldercare, we analyse two forms of surveillance: virtual homecare and sensor-flooring, where clients are involved and positioned in different ways in accomplishing surveillance. We illuminate how the process of accomplishing (in)visibility does not only involve tinkering with technology, but also with spatial arrangements in the client's home, and with clients' behaviour. Consequently, we underscore how tinkering may turn out to be a difficult and even conflictual task of negotiating professional authority and accountability in ways that resonate with clients' sense of autonomy and policy ideals of empowerment. Our studies underline how the power dynamics of surveillance in care should not be overlooked, even though they are continuously negotiated in care practices.
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Affiliation(s)
- Annette Kamp
- Department of People and Technology, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark
| | - Sidsel Lond Grosen
- Department of People and Technology, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark
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9
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Stypińska J, Franke A. AI revolution in healthcare and medicine and the (re-)emergence of inequalities and disadvantages for ageing population. FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY 2023; 7:1038854. [PMID: 36755564 PMCID: PMC9899925 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2022.1038854] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/07/2022] [Accepted: 12/20/2022] [Indexed: 06/18/2023]
Abstract
AI systems in medicine and healthcare are being extensively explored in prevention, diagnosis, novel drug designs and after-care. The application of AI technology in healthcare systems promises impressive outcomes such as equalising healthcare, reducing mortality rate and human error, reducing medical costs, as well as reducing reliance on social services. In the light of the WHO "Decade of Healthy Ageing", AI applications are designed as digital innovations to support the quality of life for older persons. However, the emergence of evidence of different types of algorithmic bias in AI applications, ageism in the use of digital devices and platforms, as well as age bias in digital data suggests that the use of AI might have discriminatory effects on older population or even cause harm. This paper addresses the issue of age biases and age discrimination in AI applications in medicine and healthcare systems and try to identify main challenges in this area. It will reflect on the potential of AI applications to amplify the already existing health inequalities by discussing two levels where potential negative impact of AI on age inequalities might be observed. Firstly, we will address the technical level of age bias in algorithms and digital datasets (especially health data). Secondly, we will discuss the potential disparate outcomes of automatic decision-making systems (ADMs) used in healthcare on the older population. These examples will demonstrate, although only partially, how AI systems may create new structures of age inequalities and novel dimensions of exclusion in healthcare and medicine.
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Affiliation(s)
- Justyna Stypińska
- Department of Sociology, Institute of East European Studies, Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany
- European New School of Digital Studies, Viadrina University, Frankfurt (Oder), Brandenburg, Germany
| | - Annette Franke
- Department of Social Work, Evangelische Hochschule Ludwigsburg, Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
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10
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Ellison KL, Martin W, Pedersen I, Marshall BL. Visualizing the datasphere: Representations of old bodies and their data in promotional images of smart sensor technologies for aging at home. FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY 2022; 7:1008510. [PMID: 36606119 PMCID: PMC9807810 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2022.1008510] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/31/2022] [Accepted: 11/21/2022] [Indexed: 06/17/2023]
Abstract
Technologies for people aging at home are increasingly prevalent and include ambient monitoring devices that work together with wearables to remotely track and monitor older adults' biometric data and activities of daily living. There is, however, little research into the promotional and speculative images of technology-in-use. Our paper examines the ways in which the datafication of aging is offered up visually by technology companies to promote their products. Specifically, we ask: how are data visualized in promotional images of smart sensor technologies for aging at home? And in these visualizations, what happens to the aging body and relations of care? We include in our definition of smart sensor technologies both wearable and ambient monitoring devices, so long as they are used for the in-home passive monitoring of the inhabitant by a caregiver, excluding those devices targeted for institutional settings or those used for self-monitoring purposes. Our sample consists of 221 images collected between January and July of 2021 from the websites of 14 English-language companies that offer smart sensor technology for aging at home. Following a visual semiotic analysis, we present 3 themes on the visual representation of old bodies and their data: (1) Captured Data, (2) Spatialized Data, and (3) Networked Data. Each, we argue, contribute to a broader visualization of the "datasphere". We conclude by highlighting the underlying assumptions of old bodies in the co-constitution of aging and technologies in which the fleshy and lived corporeality of bodies is more often lost, reduced to data points and automated care scenarios, and further disentangled from other bodies, contexts and things.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Wendy Martin
- Department of Health Sciences, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, Middlesex, United Kingdom
| | - Isabel Pedersen
- Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Ontario Tech University, Oshawa, ON, Canada
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11
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Stypinska J. AI ageism: a critical roadmap for studying age discrimination and exclusion in digitalized societies. AI & SOCIETY 2022; 38:665-677. [PMID: 36212226 PMCID: PMC9527733 DOI: 10.1007/s00146-022-01553-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/28/2021] [Accepted: 06/28/2022] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
In the last few years, we have witnessed a surge in scholarly interest and scientific evidence of how algorithms can produce discriminatory outcomes, especially with regard to gender and race. However, the analysis of fairness and bias in AI, important for the debate of AI for social good, has paid insufficient attention to the category of age and older people. Ageing populations have been largely neglected during the turn to digitality and AI. In this article, the concept of AI ageism is presented to make a theoretical contribution to how the understanding of inclusion and exclusion within the field of AI can be expanded to include the category of age. AI ageism can be defined as practices and ideologies operating within the field of AI, which exclude, discriminate, or neglect the interests, experiences, and needs of older population and can be manifested in five interconnected forms: (1) age biases in algorithms and datasets (technical level), (2) age stereotypes, prejudices and ideologies of actors in AI (individual level), (3) invisibility of old age in discourses on AI (discourse level), (4) discriminatory effects of use of AI technology on different age groups (group level), (5) exclusion as users of AI technology, services and products (user level). Additionally, the paper provides empirical illustrations of the way ageism operates in these five forms.
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Affiliation(s)
- Justyna Stypinska
- Freie Universität, Berlin, Germany
- European New School of Digital Studies, European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder), Germany
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12
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Berridge C, Grigorovich A. Algorithmic harms and digital ageism in the use of surveillance technologies in nursing homes. FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY 2022; 7:957246. [PMID: 36189442 PMCID: PMC9525107 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2022.957246] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/30/2022] [Accepted: 08/26/2022] [Indexed: 05/10/2023]
Abstract
Ageism has not been centered in scholarship on AI or algorithmic harms despite the ways in which older adults are both digitally marginalized and positioned as targets for surveillance technology and risk mitigation. In this translation paper, we put gerontology into conversation with scholarship on information and data technologies within critical disability, race, and feminist studies and explore algorithmic harms of surveillance technologies on older adults and care workers within nursing homes in the United States and Canada. We start by identifying the limitations of emerging scholarship and public discourse on "digital ageism" that is occupied with the inclusion and representation of older adults in AI or machine learning at the expense of more pressing questions. Focusing on the investment in these technologies in the context of COVID-19 in nursing homes, we draw from critical scholarship on information and data technologies to deeply understand how ageism is implicated in the systemic harms experienced by residents and workers when surveillance technologies are positioned as solutions. We then suggest generative pathways and point to various possible research agendas that could illuminate emergent algorithmic harms and their animating force within nursing homes. In the tradition of critical gerontology, ours is a project of bringing insights from gerontology and age studies to bear on broader work on automation and algorithmic decision-making systems for marginalized groups, and to bring that work to bear on gerontology. This paper illustrates specific ways in which important insights from critical race, disability and feminist studies helps us draw out the power of ageism as a rhetorical and analytical tool. We demonstrate why such engagement is necessary to realize gerontology's capacity to contribute to timely discourse on algorithmic harms and to elevate the issue of ageism for serious engagement across fields concerned with social and economic justice. We begin with nursing homes because they are an understudied, yet socially significant and timely setting in which to understand algorithmic harms. We hope this will contribute to broader efforts to understand and redress harms across sectors and marginalized collectives.
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Affiliation(s)
- Clara Berridge
- School of Social Work, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States
- *Correspondence: Clara Berridge
| | - Alisa Grigorovich
- Recreation and Leisure Studies, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada
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13
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Abstract
Abstract
In the development and deployment of health and ageing innovations, underlying values such as privacy or quality of life are often seen as a relatively stable starting point, if considered at all. However, values are neither stable nor singular. This paper introduces a valuation framework to explore the co-constitution of values and technological innovations. A careful and ongoing reflection on values and valuation, in particular in innovation practices targeted at older people, is crucial when aiming to increase sustainable innovations. Therefore, we include a Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) perspective to technological development and innovation, to understand better the construction and co-constitution of ageing-in-place technologies. This framework is developed following a review of literature on values and valuation in the broad field of SSH. The proposed valuation framework consists of three core elements: (a) value multiplicity, (b) value dynamism, and (c) valuation implications. To demonstrate potential applicability of the framework, we conducted a thought experiment on values and valuation practices related to the development and potential further deployment of a COVID-19 health app in the Netherlands. This experiment pays special attention to multiple values at stake and implications for older adults who age in place. We argue this valuation framework provokes reflection on dynamic and multiple values underlying technology use and non-use, and contributes to responsible health and ageing innovations.
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Greubel C, Moors EHM, Peine A. From Mattering to Mattering More: 'Goods' and 'Bads' in Ageing and Innovation Policy Discourses. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH 2021; 18:ijerph18147596. [PMID: 34300047 PMCID: PMC8304814 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18147596] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/08/2021] [Revised: 07/08/2021] [Accepted: 07/13/2021] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
This paper provides an empirical ethics analysis of the goods and bads enacted in EU ageing and innovation policy discourses. It revolves around a case study of the persona Maria, developed as part of the EU's Active and Healthy Ageing Policies. Drawing on Pols' empirical ethics as a theoretical and methodological approach, we describe the variety of goods (practices/situations to be strived for) and bads (practices/situations to be avoided) that are articulated in Maria's persona. We analyse how certain ideas about good and bad ageing-those associated with the use of sophisticated technologies-come to matter more in the solutions proposed for Maria and the framing of her unmet needs, while others which were initially seen as relevant and that describe her dreams, fears and interactions, are marginalised. The paper adds to existing studies of ageing and technology by analysing specific practices that render visible how the idea of technology and data sharing as evidently the right path towards futures of (good) ageing, comes to prevail.
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15
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Co-Design as Learning: The Differences of Learning When Involving Older People in Digitalization in Four Countries. SOCIETIES 2021. [DOI: 10.3390/soc11020066] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Involving older people through co-design has become increasingly attractive as an approach to develop technologies for them. However, less attention has been paid to the internal dynamics and localized socio-material arrangements that enact this method in practice. In this paper, we show how the outcomes that can be achieved with user involvement often pertain to learning, but their content can differ significantly based on how the approach is implemented in practice. Combining explorative, qualitative findings from co-design conducted in four countries (Canada, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden), we illustrate how different types of learning occurred as design workshops engaged the experiences and skills of older people in different ways. Our findings make visible how learning can be a core outcome of co-design activities with older adults, while raising awareness of the role of the power relations and socio-material arrangements that structure these design practices in particular ways. To benefit from the full wealth of insights that can be learned by involving older people, deeper knowledge is needed of the implicit features of design, the materials, meanings, and power aspects involved.
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Fletcher JR. Anti-aging technoscience & the biologization of cumulative inequality: Affinities in the biopolitics of successful aging. J Aging Stud 2020; 55:100899. [PMID: 33272453 PMCID: PMC7576313 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2020.100899] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/30/2020] [Revised: 10/13/2020] [Accepted: 10/13/2020] [Indexed: 12/22/2022]
Abstract
This paper charts the emergence of under-remarked affinities between contemporary anti-aging technoscience and some social scientific work on biological aging. Both have recently sought to develop increasingly sophisticated operationalizations of age, aging and agedness as biological phenomena, in response to traditional notions of normal and chronological aging. Rather than being an interesting coincidence, these affinities indicate the influence of a biopolitics of successful aging on government, industry and social science. This biopolitics construes aging as a personal project that is mastered through specific forms of entrepreneurial individual action, especially consumption practices. Social scientists must remain alert to this biopolitics and its influence on their own work, because the individualization of cumulative inequalities provides intellectual and moral justifications for anti-aging interventions that exploit those inequalities.
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Affiliation(s)
- James Rupert Fletcher
- Institute of Gerontology, Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, King's College London, United Kingdom.
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Moreira T, Hansen AA, Lassen AJ. From quantified to qualculated age: the health pragmatics of biological age measurement. SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS 2020; 42:1344-1358. [PMID: 32472599 DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13109] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 06/11/2023]
Abstract
There is growing interest, within the social sciences, in understanding self-quantification and how it affects health practices in contemporary society. There is, however, less research on how ageing and health measurement relate, even though this relationship has become more pertinent with the growing availability of services and devices offering biological, personalised age measurements, from simple online questionnaires to telomere length quantification. Little is known about who uses these devices, why they use them and the socio-technical implications of such uses. To explore these issues, we conducted semi-structured interviews and focus groups with users of measurements of biological age (BA) in Denmark. We found that participants engage with the measurements with a degree of scepticism regarding their technical validity, reliability and sensitivity. Rather than seeking an exact biological quantification, participants use measurements as a pragmatic, rough indication of individual health. We develop a conceptual model to understand participants' engagement with BA measurements, which suggests that, instead of a substitution of chronological age for BA, users gauge the difference between the two to qualify their present and future individual trajectory in a lay model of the relationship between functional capacity and age.
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Affiliation(s)
- Tiago Moreira
- Department of Sociology, Durham University, Durham, UK
| | - Asger Aarup Hansen
- Copenhagen Centre for Health Research in the Humanities, Saxo-Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
| | - Aske Juul Lassen
- Copenhagen Centre for Health Research in the Humanities, Saxo-Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
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18
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Abstract
AbstractThis paper presents a model for studying ageing and technology. It investigates the theoretical gains that can be made by combining insights from Age Studies and Science and Technology Studies (STS). Although technology has become a much more salient part in the everyday lives of older people and investments are high in technologies to deal with the alleged challenges of demographic change, theory development about ageing–technology relations has not kept up with these trends. Partly this is due to the poor connection between the social scientific understanding of ageing and the technically focused discipline of gerontechnology. This has led to an interventionist logic that underlies much of the current and implicit theorising about ageing and technology. We briefly analyse the problems of the interventionist logic and then present a model that conceptualises ageing and technology as co-constituted. We propose this model – which we call the CAT-model – to highlight a number of fundamental ideas about ageing–technology relations. At the centre are four different arenas (life-worlds of older people, design worlds, technological artefacts and images of ageing) in and across which these relations can and should be studied. To develop the model, we build on our own theoretical and empirical work over the last decade, and on examples from recent scholarship that straddle the disciplinary boundaries between STS and Age Studies.
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Boelsbjerg HB, Glasdam S. Dying Fit or Not-Physical Activity as Antidote to Death? OMEGA-JOURNAL OF DEATH AND DYING 2020; 84:771-791. [PMID: 32237959 DOI: 10.1177/0030222820913716] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/15/2022]
Abstract
Physical activity has increasingly gained attention within palliative care. This article aims to explore how the idea of physical activity influences patients with advanced cancer and health-care professionals' interactions. The empirical material was gathered as part of an anthropological field study about palliative care needs among 16 patients with advanced cancer, consisting of observations and interviews with patients, relatives, and professionals. Two of the patient cases were analyzed, inspired by Goffman's theory, showing how patients and health-care professionals interact in relation to physical activity. The findings show that patients played roles either embracing physical activity or distancing it by postponement. Professionals played expert roles of duty and attachment, stressing the importance of physical activity. Thus, they accepted a minimum of physical activity when patients were close to death. Professionals regarded patients' absence of physical activity as a lack of desire to live; patients regard it as a way to live.
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Affiliation(s)
- Hanne Bess Boelsbjerg
- Interacting Minds Centre, the Medical Faculty, Aarhus University.,Institute for Clinical Medicine, Centre for Planned Surgery, Regional Hospital Silkeborg
| | - Stinne Glasdam
- Integrative Health Research, Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University
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Abstract
AbstractCognitive decline and dementia have become major concerns for many individuals reaching later life within contemporary Western societies. This fear of decline is central to the social divide between the third age embodying ideals of maintained health, activity and lifestyle choices, and the fourth age, a social imaginary encompassing the irreversible decline associated with ageing. In this article, we explore how brain-training technologies have become successful by relying on tensions between the third and fourth ages. We review current debates on the concepts contained in brain training and examine the emphasis on the moral virtue of ‘training the brain’ in later life as an extension of fitness and health management. We underline the limited consideration given to social positioning within old age itself in the literature. We further argue that using brain-training devices can support a distancing from intimations of dementia; a condition associated with an ‘ageing without agency’. Drawing on Bourdieu, we use the concept of distinction to describe this process of social positioning. We discuss the impact that such ‘technologies of distinction’ can have on people with dementia by ‘othering’ them. We conclude that the issue of distinction within later life, particularly within the field of cognitive decline, is an important aspect of the current culture of active cognitive ageing.
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Chougule PS, Najjar RP, Finkelstein MT, Kandiah N, Milea D. Light-Induced Pupillary Responses in Alzheimer's Disease. Front Neurol 2019; 10:360. [PMID: 31031692 PMCID: PMC6473037 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00360] [Citation(s) in RCA: 50] [Impact Index Per Article: 10.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/12/2018] [Accepted: 03/25/2019] [Indexed: 12/25/2022] Open
Abstract
The impact of Alzheimer's disease (AD) on the pupillary light response (PLR) is controversial, being dependent on the stage of the disease and on the experimental pupillometric protocols. The main hypothesis driving pupillometry research in AD is based on the concept that the AD-related neurodegeneration affects both the parasympathetic and the sympathetic arms of the PLR (cholinergic and noradrenergic theory), combined with additional alterations of the afferent limb, involving the melanopsin expressing retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs), subserving the PLR. Only a few studies have evaluated the value of pupillometry as a potential biomarker in AD, providing various results compatible with parasympathetic dysfunction, displaying increased latency of pupillary constriction to light, decreased constriction amplitude, faster redilation after light offset, decreased maximum velocity of constriction (MCV) and maximum constriction acceleration (MCA) compared to controls. Decreased MCV and MCA appeared to be the most accurate of all PLR parameters allowing differentiation between AD and healthy controls while increased post-illumination pupillary response was the most consistent feature, however, these results could not be replicated by more recent studies, focusing on early and pre-clinical stages of the disease. Whether static or dynamic pupillometry yields useful biomarkers for AD screening or diagnosis remains unclear. In this review, we synopsize the current knowledge on pupillometric features in AD and other neurodegenerative diseases, and discuss potential roles of pupillometry in AD detection, diagnosis and monitoring, alone or in combination with additional biomarkers.
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Affiliation(s)
- Pratik S Chougule
- Department of Visual Neurosciences, Singapore Eye Research Institute, Singapore, Singapore
| | - Raymond P Najjar
- Department of Visual Neurosciences, Singapore Eye Research Institute, Singapore, Singapore.,The Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences ACP, Duke-National University of Singapore (NUS) Medical School, Singapore, Singapore
| | - Maxwell T Finkelstein
- Department of Visual Neurosciences, Singapore Eye Research Institute, Singapore, Singapore
| | - Nagaendran Kandiah
- Department of Neurology, National Neuroscience Institute, Singapore, Singapore.,Duke-National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore, Singapore
| | - Dan Milea
- Department of Visual Neurosciences, Singapore Eye Research Institute, Singapore, Singapore.,The Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences ACP, Duke-National University of Singapore (NUS) Medical School, Singapore, Singapore.,Singapore National Eye Centre, Singapore, Singapore
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