开放科学的社区参与在哪里?评论“(为什么)开放式研究实践是语言学习研究的未来?”

IF 3.5 1区 文学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Teresa Girolamo, she/her, Lindsay K. Butler, she/her, Samantha Ghali, she/her, Kristina T. Johnson, she/her
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These studies inform what types of language supports may be beneficial to these individuals and can motivate new techniques to support language learning such as augmentative technology and communication devices. Open research increases access to underserved populations and facilitates cross-disciplinary innovation. As such, it is critical that these populations be included in the future of open language research.</p><p>Marsden and Morgan-Short argued that open science is the pathway to equity. We argue that open science practices do not lead to equity for racially and ethnically minoritized communities without proactive planning, citing examples from linguistics and autism research. Rickford (<span>1997</span>) noted language research has a long, sinister history of taking from African American English speaking communities to advance science and theory. These unequal partnerships have extended to other minoritized communities (e.g., Indigenous). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为一个跨学科的研究团队,我们跨越语言学、工程学、语言病理学和专注于沟通障碍的教育,我们发现马斯登和摩根-肖特最先进的文章非常相关。我们赞同开放科学对语言研究的重要性,并赞赏其促进公平的潜力。然而,我们认为目前关于开放科学的辩论是不完全的——缺乏足够的社区和利益相关者的参与,特别是对于那些有语言障碍和种族和民族少数的个人。马斯登和摩根-肖特声称,开放科学方法将支持研究人员、参与者和研究问题的包容性和多样性。我们同意这一点,但我们认为,开放科学的辩论忽视了一个深受开放科学实践影响的群体:语言障碍患者,特别是沟通障碍患者。例如,五岁以上的自闭症患者中,近三分之一的人基本不会说话,不会说任何语言,或者只会说少量的单个单词和固定短语(Tager-Flusberg &Kasari, 2013)。然而,在过去的几十年里,对这些人的研究有所下降(Stedman等人,2019),加剧了这一人群和整个人群在语言习得方面的知识差距。语言研究中的开放科学必须以包容性为中心,共享资源,扩大对有沟通障碍的边缘个体(例如,语言能力最低或有语言障碍的自闭症个体)的访问,以推进对他们需求的倡导基础,并确保我们对语言发展的理解具有广泛的代表性。马斯登和摩根-肖特还提出,对于那些有语言障碍和/或同时存在智力障碍的弱势参与者的研究,数据共享可能是不可能的,也不符合伦理。然而,我们认为,虽然将这些人群纳入开放科学需要仔细考虑,但不应将其解释为排除的理由。相反,有意识的研究设计——有目的地设计数据共享和开放研究的可能性——和动态的知情同意可以帮助克服这些挑战。例如,在同意过程中,研究人员应透明地解释开放科学的影响,包括当前研究项目的具体情况,并为参与者提供选择加入共享其数据的选择,以及提出问题、了解和展示其对开放科学相关权利和术语的理解的机会,并以符合其需求的格式获取材料(例如,视觉支持)。这些建议与智障自我倡导者和社区利益相关者的最佳实践相一致(Bigby等人,2014;Nicholson et al., 2013)。根据我们的经验,有了这样一个过程,许多家庭都对参与科学充满热情,并且可能愿意分享他们的数据,因为他们见证了提醒其他研究人员注意他们独特的经历和需求的价值。此外,需要在负责任的研究行为方面进行培训才能访问的加密数据库为研究人员提供了一种在保持隐私的同时合乎道德地共享音频和视频等可识别数据的方法。更广泛地说,对语言障碍和不同神经类型的语言的研究是捕捉语言学习和使用的丰富性的基础。这些研究揭示了哪种类型的语言支持可能对这些个体有益,并可以激发新的技术来支持语言学习,如增强技术和通信设备。开放研究增加了获得服务不足人群的机会,并促进了跨学科创新。因此,将这些人群纳入未来的开放语言研究是至关重要的。马斯登和摩根-肖特认为,开放科学是通往公平的途径。我们引用了语言学和自闭症研究的例子,认为如果没有积极的规划,开放科学实践不会为种族和少数民族社区带来公平。里奇福德(1997)指出,语言研究有一段漫长而邪恶的历史,即从非裔美国人说英语的社区中获取知识来推进科学和理论。这种不平等的伙伴关系已扩展到其他少数群体(例如土著)。Per Rickford(1997),以白人为主的研究人员未能优先培养他们所研究社区的个人成为语言研究人员;这种道德上的失败阻碍了科学和政策的发展,以满足工作场所、学校和法院系统的社区需求。将近30年后,Charity Hudley等人。 (2020)讨论了许多相同的问题,强调社区对语言研究的参与不足如何产生了语言意识形态,研究方法和教育模式,这些意识形态,研究方法和教育模式不能反映或服务于作为全体人口一部分的种族和少数民族社区的需求。研究人员有责任减轻这些危害,重点是建立合乎道德的研究社区伙伴关系(Charity Hudley et al., 2020)。除了种族和民族,语言研究还必须把种族和残疾放在开放科学的中心。像种族一样,残疾是一种社会建构,是人类经验的自然组成部分,语言研究在发展科学理论和发现时必须考虑到这一点。自闭症研究中的语言系统地将自闭症种族和少数民族患者排除在诊断标准、评估和实践的证据基础之外(Girolamo等人,出版中)。此外,很少对自闭症研究中存在差异的维度进行检查(Anderson et al., 2018)。总之,社区参与开放科学必须包括交叉身份。总的来说,我们同意开放科学对语言研究是有益的,但我们呼吁开放科学的关键实施。进行语言研究是一种动态的行为,研究人员必须考虑谁的声音在开放科学等科学运动中缺席。在一个以科学家而非社区为核心的研究生态系统中,通过开放科学实现公平可能吗?语言研究中的开放科学实践是否反映了跨学科的影响和参与者群体的观点?马斯登和摩根-肖特没有对这些问题进行讨论,这表明这些复杂性尚未被纳入主流语言研究。研究人员必须将社区参与开放科学视为强制性的。最后,我们重申我们对开放科学在语言研究中的价值的认同。我们感谢有机会考虑作者与我们的同事提出的这些复杂问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Where is Community Involvement in Open Science? A Commentary on “(Why) Are Open Research Practices the Future for the Study of Language Learning?”

As an interdisciplinary research team spanning linguistics, engineering, speech–language pathology, and education focusing on communication disorders, we found Marsden and Morgan-Short's state-of-the-art article extremely relevant. We endorse the importance of open science to language research and appreciate its potential for advancing equity. Yet we argue that the current debate on open science is incomplete—lacking sufficient community and stakeholder involvement, particularly for individuals who have language disorders and who are racially and ethnically minoritized.

Marsden and Morgan-Short have claimed that open science methods will support inclusivity and diversity of researchers, participants, and research questions. We agree but argue that the open science debate as it is neglects a population deeply impacted by open science practices: individuals with language disorders, and specifically, communication disorders. For example, nearly one third of autistic individuals over the age of five years are minimally speaking, with no spoken language or a small number of single words and fixed phrases (Tager-Flusberg & Kasari, 2013). Yet research with these individuals has declined over the past few decades (Stedman et al., 2019), exacerbating the knowledge gap about language acquisition in this population and in the full population. Open science in language research must center inclusivity to share resources and expand access to marginalized individuals with communication disorders (e.g., autistic individuals who are minimally verbal or have language impairment), with the broader aim of advancing the advocacy base for their needs and ensuring that our understanding of language development is broadly representative.

Marsden and Morgan-Short have also suggested that data sharing may not be possible or ethical for research with vulnerable participants such as those with language disorders and/or co-occurring intellectual disability. However, we argue that, while the inclusion of these populations in open science requires careful consideration, it should not be interpreted as a reason for exclusion. Rather, mindful study design—purposefully designed with the possibility of data sharing and open research—and dynamic informed consent can help overcome these challenges. For example, during consent, researchers should be transparent in explaining the implications of open science, including the specifics of the current research project, and also provide participants with the choice to opt-in to the sharing of their data as well as opportunities to ask questions, learn about and demonstrate understanding of their rights and terms pertaining to open science, and access materials in formats responsive to their needs (e.g., visual supports). These suggestions align with best practices from self-advocates with intellectual disability and community stakeholders (Bigby et al., 2014; Nicholson et al., 2013). With such a process in place, in our experience, many families are enthusiastic about being involved in science and may be willing to share their data because they have witnessed the value of alerting other researchers to their unique experiences and needs. In addition, encrypted databases that require training in the responsible conduct of research for access to them provide researchers with a method of ethically sharing identifiable data, such as audio and video, while maintaining privacy.

More broadly, the study of language disorders and language in different neurotypes is fundamental to capturing the richness of language learning and use. These studies inform what types of language supports may be beneficial to these individuals and can motivate new techniques to support language learning such as augmentative technology and communication devices. Open research increases access to underserved populations and facilitates cross-disciplinary innovation. As such, it is critical that these populations be included in the future of open language research.

Marsden and Morgan-Short argued that open science is the pathway to equity. We argue that open science practices do not lead to equity for racially and ethnically minoritized communities without proactive planning, citing examples from linguistics and autism research. Rickford (1997) noted language research has a long, sinister history of taking from African American English speaking communities to advance science and theory. These unequal partnerships have extended to other minoritized communities (e.g., Indigenous). Per Rickford (1997), predominantly white researchers failed to prioritize training individuals from the communities that they studied to become language researchers themselves; this ethical failure hindered science and policy development for meeting community needs in the workplace, school, and court system. Nearly 30 years later, Charity Hudley et al. (2020) discussed many of these same issues, underlining how inadequate community involvement in language research has generated linguistic ideologies, research methods, and educational models that do not reflect or serve the needs of racially and ethnically minoritized communities as part of the full population. It is the responsibility of researchers to mitigate these harms, with an emphasis on creating ethical research–community partnerships (Charity Hudley et al., 2020).

In addition to race and ethnicity, language research must also center race and dis/ability in open science. Like race, dis/ability is a social construct and a natural part of the human experience for which language research must account in developing scientific theories and findings. Language in autism research has systematically excluded autistic racially and ethnically minoritized persons from the evidence base informing diagnostic criteria, assessments, and practices (Girolamo et al., in press). Further, examination of dimensions along which disparities exist in autism research has been rare (Anderson et al., 2018). Altogether, community involvement in open science must include intersectional identities.

Overall, we concur that open science is beneficial for language research, but we call for critical implementation of open science. Conducting language research is a dynamic act, and researchers must consider whose voices are absent from scientific movements like open science. Is equity via open science possible in a research ecosystem where scientists, and not communities, are at the core? Do open science practices in language research reflect interdisciplinary influences and the perspectives of participant communities? An absence of discussion of these issues in Marsden and Morgan-Short indicates that these complexities have yet to be integrated into mainstream language research. Researchers must treat community involvement in open science as mandatory. Finally, we end by reiterating our agreement with the value of open science in language research. We appreciate the opportunity to consider these complex issues that the authors have raised with our colleagues.

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来源期刊
Language Learning
Language Learning Multiple-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
15.90%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Language Learning is a scientific journal dedicated to the understanding of language learning broadly defined. It publishes research articles that systematically apply methods of inquiry from disciplines including psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, educational inquiry, neuroscience, ethnography, sociolinguistics, sociology, and anthropology. It is concerned with fundamental theoretical issues in language learning such as child, second, and foreign language acquisition, language education, bilingualism, literacy, language representation in mind and brain, culture, cognition, pragmatics, and intergroup relations. A subscription includes one or two annual supplements, alternating among a volume from the Language Learning Cognitive Neuroscience Series, the Currents in Language Learning Series or the Language Learning Special Issue Series.
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