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Distributed for UCL Press

Matters of Significance

Replication, Translation and Academic Freedom in developmental science

Distributed for UCL Press

Matters of Significance

Replication, Translation and Academic Freedom in developmental science

A thorough examination of field-shaping research on attachment that serves as a valuable resource for understanding child developmental science and ethically applying its insights in practice.

Application of scientific findings to effective practice and informed policymaking is an aspiration for much research in the biomedical, behavioral, and developmental sciences. But too often translations of science to practice are conceptually narrow and developed quickly as salves to an urgent problem. For developmental science, widely implemented parenting interventions are prime examples of technical translations from knowledge about the causes of children’s mental distress. Aiming to support family relationships and facilitate adaptive child development, these programs are rushed through when the scientific findings on which they are based remain contested and without enough evidence of success from randomized controlled trials.

In Matters of Significance, the authors draw on forty years of experience with theoretical, empirical, meta-analytic, and translational work in child development research to highlight the complex relations between replication, translation, and academic freedom. They argue that challenging fake facts promulgated by under-replicated and underpowered studies is also a method of translation. Such a challenge can, in the highlighted field of attachment and emotion regulation research, bust popular myths about the decisive role of genes, hormones, or the brain on parenting and child development, with a balancing impact on practice and policy making. The authors argue that academic freedom from interference by pressure groups, stakeholders, funders, or university administrators in the core stages of research is a necessary but besieged condition for adversarial research and myth-busting.
 

240 pages | 2 halftones, 26 line drawings | 6.14 x 9.21

Education: Education--General Studies


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Reviews

"This thoughtful volume is an accessible overview of the authors’ field-shaping collaborative research on attachment and an indispensable primer on differentiating between sense and nonsense in the service of producing cumulative developmental science and ethically translating its core insights."

Glenn I. Roisman, University of Minnesota

"The truly original arguments presented in Matters of Significance go beyond attachment, as they concern the nature of developmental science and its relation to ethical, cultural, legal, and political issues."

Jay Belsky, University of California, Davis

Table of Contents

List of figures
List of tables
Preface
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Attachment theory in a nutshell

Part 1: Replication crisis and its remedies

1 Power failure in developmental research
2 A moratorium of self-reports
3 Meta-analyses searching for replicated evidence

Part 2: Translation to policy or practice

4 Video-feedback intervention (VIPP-SD) promotes sensitive parenting and secure attachment
5 Institutionalised child-rearing is structural neglect
6 Future generations can be saved from genocidal trauma, the case of the Holocaust
7 Jumping from is to ought?
8 Dubious effect size standards and cost-effectiveness criteria

Part 3: Busting myths is translation

9 It’s all in the genome?
10 Attachment and parenting in the brain and hormones?
11 Is attachment culture-specific?
12 Parenting shapes prosocial development?
13 Is diagnosing attachment of individual children valid?
14 SOS Children’s Villages in the best interest of children?
15 Is adoption a modern, unethical in(ter)vention?

Part 4: Protecting academic freedom promotes replication and translation

16 Limits to participant, public, and policymaker involvement
17 Caution: Personal Conflict of Interests
18 Academic freedom versus ‘safe spaces’

Epilogue: Replication, translation and academic freedom

Index

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