The stethoscope goes digital: Learning through attention, distraction and distortion

Q4 Arts and Humanities
M. V. Drie, A. Harris
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

For centuries, those training doctors have been faced with the challenges of standardising subjective experiences and constructing “the universal body” in learning situations. Various technologies have been introduced to address these challenges, with varying degrees of success. In this article we focus on the stethoscope, specifically the electrical and digital stethoscope models. Historical and social studies of medicine have already underlined the sociomateriality of learning in medicine. In this article we underscore the per formative nature of teaching and learning in the sociomaterial context. We do so by juxtaposing ethnographic and historical events that stage electrical and digital stethoscopes. These are not documentations of everyday practices but rather reconstructions of choreographed performances for learning about the body. In these stagings, the novice is taught to focus attention and avoid distraction, when learning the sounds of “the body”. Through engaging with, and comparing, different ethnographic and historic materials and artefacts, and through methodological reflection, we examine the importance not only of attention and distraction in learning a bodily skill, but also of dealing with distortion. We argue that these ethnographic and historic insights into distortion illuminate a neglected aspect of medical training, and more generally, in shaping sensory perceptions.
听诊器实现数字化:通过注意力、分心和扭曲进行学习
几个世纪以来,那些接受培训的医生一直面临着标准化主观体验和在学习环境中构建“普遍身体”的挑战。为应对这些挑战,已经引入了各种技术,并取得了不同程度的成功。本文主要介绍听诊器,特别是电听诊器和数字听诊器的型号。医学的历史和社会研究已经强调了医学学习的社会物质性。在这篇文章中,我们强调了在社会物质背景下教学的形成性。我们通过并置民族志和历史事件来实现这一点,这些事件展示了电听诊器和数字听诊器。这些不是日常练习的文件,而是学习身体的舞蹈表演的重建。在这些阶段,新手被教导在学习“身体”的声音时要集中注意力,避免分心。通过接触和比较不同的人种学和历史材料以及人工制品,并通过方法论反思,我们不仅考察了注意力和分心在学习身体技能方面的重要性,还考察了处理扭曲的重要性。我们认为,这些对扭曲的民族志和历史见解揭示了医学训练中被忽视的一个方面,更普遍地说,在塑造感官方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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期刊介绍: Gesnerus is the official journal of the Swiss Society for the History of Medicine and Sciences (SSHMS). It publishes original articles, short communications and documents on different periods and aspects of the history of medicine and sciences and also focuses on theoretical and social aspects of this subject.
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