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1.
Front Psychol ; 15: 1411415, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39161692

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study is to gain an understanding of the development of consciousness and its relationship with education based on different theoretical models-namely those by Piaget, Vygotsky and Steiner. All three of them focus on different subcomponents of the educational process and there is hence a need for integrative discussion. Piaget and Vygotsky are fundamental references in the understanding of developmental and learning processes. Steiner was a pioneer in proposing a pedagogy that progresses by integrating feeling and wanting alongside thinking in the educational process. Their theories have important similarities but also differences and these will be essential for broadening the understanding of the construction of consciousness and its relationships with education.

2.
Front Psychol ; 15: 1425751, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39045439

ABSTRACT

Vygotsky straddled the period of the Russian Revolution and found himself facing the Marxist materialist ideology of the Soviet Union with the need for a new method of psychology. Ironically, the Soviet Union's need for a Marxist based method of psychology coincided with Vygotsky's prior research on methods of interpretation which were inspired by Hegel and primarily based on the role of consciousness and culture. As a result of Vygotsky's pre-revolutionary work and inspiration from Hegel clashing with the post-revolutionary need for a new methodology for psychology, Vygotsky developed his Cultural Historical Theory. In presenting his new theory, Vygotsky attempted to resolve a fundamental ideological conflict between idealism and materialism. Furthermore, Vygotsky worked to create an effective new research method by drawing inspiration from Gestalt psychology, Hegel, Marx, and Engels. The result of Vygotsky's efforts was a theory based on psychology of consciousness and mind rather than a biology-based psychology focused entirely on analysis of stimuli and responses. In analyzing Vygotsky's theory, it is useful to draw inspiration from Vygotsky's criticism of pure empiricism, and to be inspired by Vygotsky's demonstration on how deeply rooted differences between societies may be bridged by finding unexpected commonalities within opposing ideologies.

3.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 58(3): 963-980, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38642288

ABSTRACT

When teachers explain science concepts-for example, the solar wind, or plasma waves-some methods seem to be quick-acting and others long-lasting. Still others pose as many problems as they seem to solve. How, for example, does a parent explain how there can be solar wind without any air in space? How does a teacher explain how there can be plasma waves without any water? Locating metaphor between thinking and speech rather than within one or the other, we work out a single scheme to analyze two conversations with adult Koreans. These suggest that a text studied some ten years ago in middle school science class, replete with striking visual images, has left little more than everyday concepts. Instead of trying to use the striking visual images to refill gaps in the memory, however, the questions asked by a skilled science teacher suggest ways in which thinking could be freed from the middle school dogma of only three matter phases (solid, liquid, gas). To understand a metaphor like "solar wind", we need to replace fixed matters of fact with some more elusive facts of matter.


Subject(s)
Metaphor , Schools , Humans , Adult , Thinking , Science , Comprehension , Female , Male , Concept Formation , Mental Recall
4.
Int Rev Psychiatry ; 36(1-2): 116-128, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557341

ABSTRACT

This psychobiographical study utilises Lev Vygotsky's sociocultural theory to explore the impact of diverse cultural experiences on the intellectual growth of Zoltán Paul Dienes, a prominent mathematician and theorist of mathematical education. Vygotsky's sociocultural theory is particularly relevant for understanding the impact of culture on intellectual development. According to Vygotsky, cognitive development is shaped by social and cultural interactions, and the tools and practices of a given culture. The study employs a taxonomy of cognitive tools to categorise the influences young Dienes encountered in Hungary, Austria, France, United Kingdom and elsewhere. By examining the presence and frequency of these tools in his formative years, the research sheds light on the origins of Dienes's principles in mathematical education. The research enriches psychobiography by integrating sociocultural theory, providing valuable insights into the relationship between culture, cognitive tools, and intellectual growth in knowledgeable individuals. Ultimately, this study contributes to a better comprehension of the origins and principles behind Dienes's theory of mathematical education.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Humans , United Kingdom , France
6.
BMC Med Educ ; 24(1): 94, 2024 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38287370

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Medical students' empathy toward patients with Alzheimer's is rarely found in formal medical curricula. Based on Vygotsky's theory, watching films and reflection can be considered as effective methods to improve empathy. The present study aimed to explore medical students' perceptions of empathy toward patients with Alzheimer after participating in an educational program by using interactive video based on Vygotsky's theory. METHODS: This qualitative study was conducted at Tehran University of Medical Sciences in 2022. The population included all 40 medical students. Firstly, the Still Alice movie which is about the feelings of a professor who was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease was shown to the students. Secondly, the students reflected on their experiences of watching the movie. Thirdly, a session was held for group discussion on the subject of the movie, the patient's feelings, the doctor's attitude, the social environment surrounding the patient shown in the movie, and the necessity of empathy toward patients with Alzheimer's disease. The reflection papers were analyzed using the conventional qualitative content analysis method. RESULTS: After analyzing 216 codes from 38 reflection papers, four categories, including communication with a patient with Alzheimer's, understanding the patient with Alzheimer's as a whole, medical science development, and the student's individual ideology, were extracted. CONCLUSION: Reflection and group discussion after watching movie by providing opportunities for social interaction about personal interpretations will lead to active role in enhancing empathy. Based on the perceptions of the medical students, they gained a perspective to consider the patient as a whole and pay attention to establishing a proper relationship with the patient.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Students, Medical , Humans , Empathy , Iran , Curriculum
7.
Psicol. esc. educ ; 28: e257346, 2024.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS, Index Psychology - journals | ID: biblio-1529262

ABSTRACT

O presente artigo pretende apresentar a relação entre afetividade e cognição nas perspectivas teóricas de Jean Piaget, da neurociência e de Lev Vygotsky. Na perspectiva teórica de Piaget, confere ênfase aos conceitos de interesse e assimilação. Já na perspectiva teórica da neurociência, a ênfase é colocada nas bases biológicas da aprendizagem. Ademais, problematiza o lugar da perspectiva histórico-cultural de Vygotsky, enfatizando os conceitos de significado e sentido no contexto conceitual da relação entre afeto e cognição. A partir do recorte feito, apresenta algumas possíveis contribuições de tais leituras dentro do tema trabalhado concernentes à relação entre afeto e cognição. Argumenta ainda que embora comportem diferenças, as três perspectivas explicitam a importância do afeto para a cognição. Nessa direção, conclui pela relevância das contribuições dadas pelas leituras de Piaget, Vygotsky e da neurociência. As fontes utilizadas são da literatura disponível sobre o tema.


En el presente artículo se pretende presentar la relación entre afectividad y cognición en las perspectivas teóricas de Jean Piaget, de la neurociencia y de Lev Vygotsky. En la perspectiva teórica de Piaget, confiere énfasis a los conceptos de interés y asimilación. En la perspectiva teórica de la neurociencia, el énfasis está colocado en las bases biológicas del aprendizaje. Además, problematiza el lugar de la perspectiva histórico-cultural de Vygotsky, enfatizando los conceptos de significado y sentido en el contexto conceptual de la relación entre afecto y cognición. A partir del recorte, presenta algunas posibles contribuciones de tales lecturas dentro del tema estudiado concernientes a la relación entre afecto y cognición. Argumenta que, aunque comporten diferencias, las tres perspectivas explicitan la importancia del afecto para la cognición. En esa dirección, se concluye por la relevancia de las contribuciones dadas por las lecturas de Piaget, Vygotsky y de la neurociencia. Las fuentes utilizadas son de la literatura disponible sobre el tema.


This article aims to present the relation between affection and cognition from the Jean Piaget, neuroscience and Lev Vygotsky's theoretical perspectives. From Piaget's theoretical perspective, it emphasizes the concepts of interest and assimilation. From the neuroscience theoretical perspective, emphasis is placed on the biological bases of learning. Furthermore, it problematizes the place of Vygotsky's historical-cultural perspective, emphasizing the concepts of meaning and sense in the conceptual context of the relation between affection and cognition. Based on the selection made, it presents some possible contributions of such readings within the theme discussed regarding the relation between affect and cognition. It also argues that although they have differences, the three perspectives explain the importance of affect for cognition. In this direction, it concludes that the contributions made by reading Piaget, Vygotsky and neuroscience are relevant. The sources used are from the available literature about the topic.


Subject(s)
Neurosciences , Cognition , Affect
8.
Bioinformation ; 19(10): 987-989, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37969664

ABSTRACT

Early childhood is the timely and critical period in the growth of the human being when the trajectory of children's holistic development is traced, and the foundation for their future as well-established and productive adults is set. The CoViD-19 pandemic produced profound changes in everyday life almost everywhere in the world. The personal, social and societal restrictions imposed during the CoViD-19 pandemic unquestionably blunted early childhood development by depriving young children from normal and healthy attachments through secure relationships with parents, teachers and peers. Furthermore, the public health measures enacted to counter the spread of the pandemic (e.g., mandatory masking, lockdown) contributed to a lack of social interactions essential for childhood development, and provoked perceptions of psycho-emotional stress (e.g., objective fear of the masked interlocutor, perceived fear of abandonment) in the children, which may have hampered critical periods of development. Based on theoretical foundation and our observations in the field, we propose that early intervention support may have a significant impact on the development of children victims of the effect of the CoViD-19 pandemic.

9.
Front Sociol ; 8: 1241355, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37965442

ABSTRACT

This article presents a new conceptualization of society with the ambition to sharpen thinking about social reality and to better understand how society relates to personhood. This exercise is framed in an attempt to develop the Spoken World Theory, inspired by the thinking of Rom Harré. It involves a radical rethink of the social ontology and is to be seen as an alternative to the traditional conceptualization of society as a social structure that is opposed to individual agency. The proposed alternative is based upon the disentanglement of four aspects of society along the Vygotskian public/private and individual/collective axes. As such, society can be said to manifest itself in four realms: (i) the world as we hear it: a worldwide and history-long ongoing web of conversations; (ii) the world as we see it: a set of materialized social artifacts, including a set of institutional facts; (iii) the world as we imagine it: individual umwelts or worldviews for each person based on appropriated knowledge and moral frameworks; and (iv) the world as we shape it: persons have the power to formulate intentions that they can bring to the conversational space or the space of artifacts. A major consequence of this conceptualization is that it no longer puts society outside human beings, nor that personality is only to be located inside persons. The proposed ontological framework allows us to speak in much clearer terms about how persons and society are entangled with each other in the sense that without the personhood of people, there can be no society, and that without society, people cannot have personhood. Both personhood and society are to be seen as two intertwined mechanisms that allow the individuals of the human species to complement the genetic basis of survival with a system of cultural resources that can be used for coping with everyday life. The article ends with a discussion of the practical implications of social theorizing.

10.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 57(3): 1097-1109, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37171667

ABSTRACT

This comment paper reviews Fossa (2022) from the perspective of the semiotics of inner speech. The syntactic and semantic features of inner speech described in Vygotsky, Thinking and Speech, Chap. 7, are, on the one hand, a source of creativity through the affective dimension of inner spech and, on the other hand, a therapeutic function of psychoanalysis and other forms of psychotherapy. The function of inner speech in the pre-reflective dimension is the focus of Fossa's edited volume. In order to reinforce this argument, the present paper takes as its cue the internal forms of words discussed by Potebnya and examines them. The internal form of words has certain primordial features and evokes a figure (образ; picture). Internal forms have figurative properties. Through this context-independent figuration (phonological, visual image, experiential sense of meaning), semantics causes a unit with other words in a loose semantic linkage. As they are not bound by the external form of segmented speech, they bring about a sense of reification, as if the internal form repeats itself in the proximity of semantic sense, even if the manifested expressive content is different. The internal form of words, in which the form conveys meaning as it is, reveals the semiotic character of dreams and free association, which psychoanalysis uses as clinical material. Many psychotherapies actively use pre-linguistic mediating effects, because surrendering to the internal forms that are repeated in inner speech allows the subject to return to a pre-reflective dimension from which a new subject can be recovered. From the above, this paper has shown that in the boundary zone of the transition from inner speech to outer speech situations, exposure to alterity, to intimate unknown, is involved in the constitution of the subject.


Subject(s)
Free Association , Psychoanalysis , Humans , Speech , Psychotherapy , Language
11.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 57(3): 888-912, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36795260

ABSTRACT

This article first proposes a literature review on the questioning of Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)'s legacy. Four main points of disagreement are distinguished: (1) the authenticity issues of Vygotsky's published work; (2) the unreflective use of concepts and ideas attributed to the Russian psychologist; (3) the story telling of a mythical Vygotsky-Leontiev-Luria school; and (4) the assimilation of his works with major currents of North American developmental psychology. The underlying divergence on what constitutes Vygotsky's core theory is then highlighted, namely the role of meaning in mental development. Finally, a study of the dissemination of his conceptions within the scientific community is proposed, based on the reconstitution of two networks of authors: Vygotsky's "analysts" and "emulators". This study demonstrates that the revision of Vygotsky's legacy may be understood by the very play of scientific production processes. Major Vygotskian scholars have emulated his ideas within mainstream but possibly incompatible intellectual frameworks.


Subject(s)
Schools , Humans , Russia
12.
Psicol. ciênc. prof ; 43: e256598, 2023.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS, Index Psychology - journals | ID: biblio-1529209

ABSTRACT

Este trabalho teve como objetivo analisar a relação entre arte e vida segundo Vigotski. Para isso, foi realizada uma análise conceitual dos capítulos 1, 7, 9, 10 e 11 da Psicologia da Arte, do capítulo 13 da Psicologia Pedagógica e do texto O significado histórico da crise da Psicologia: Uma investigação metodológica. A pesquisa conceitual consiste na análise semântica dos principais conceitos de uma teoria com o intuito de elucidar seus sentidos ocultos ou confusos e desvendar possíveis contradições e ambiguidades no quadro teórico. Podemos observar que a arte é um fenômeno dialético tanto em sua criação como em seus efeitos. A influência da vida, isto é, da realidade sócio-histórica, na criação artística é indireta, pois ela é sempre mediada pelo psiquismo particular do artista. Já o efeito da arte sobre a vida possibilita que o ser humano se conscientize de sua realidade social e se engaje para mudá-la. A arte é, portanto, transformadora, pois reorganiza o psiquismo e possibilita uma mudança nas condições materiais dos seres humanos.(AU)


This study aims to analyze the relationship between art and life according to Vygotsky. Therefore, a conceptual analysis of chapters 1, 7, 9, 10, and 11 of Psychology of Art, chapter 13 of Educational Psychology and the text The Historical meaning of the Crisis of Psychology: A Methodological Investigation was carried out. Conceptual research consists of the semantic analysis of the main concepts of a theory to elucidate its hidden or confused meanings and to reveal possible contradictions and ambiguities in the theoretical framework. Results show that art is a dialectical phenomenon both in its creation and its effects. The influence of life, that is, of socio-historical reality, on artistic creation is indirect since it is always mediated by the artist's particular psyche. The effect of art on life, on the other hand, allows human beings to become aware of their social reality and engage to change it. Art is, therefore, transformative, as it reorganizes the psyche and enables a change in the material conditions of human beings.(AU)


Este proyecto tuve como objetivo analizar la relación entre el arte y la vida, según Vigotski. Para esto, fue realizado un análisis de los capítulos 1, 7, 9, 10 y 11 de Psicología del arte, del capítulo 13 de Psicología Pedagógica y del texto Él significado histórico de la crisis de la Psicología: una investigación metodológica. La pesquisa conceptual consiste en la analice semántica de los conceptos de una teoría, para aclarar sus significados ocultos o confusos y desvendar contradicciones y ambigüedades em el cuadro teórico. Pudimos observar que, el arte es un fenómeno dialéctico en su creación tanto como en sus efectos. La influencia de la vida, esto es, de la realidad socio-histórica, en la creación artística es indirecta, pues es mediada por el psiquismo particular de lo artista. Así, el efecto del arte sobre la vida habilita que lo ser humano adquiera conciencia de su realidad social y que se comprometa a cambiarla. El arte, consiguientemente, transformadora, pues reorganiza lo psiquismo y habilita un cambio en las condiciones materiales de los seres humanos.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Art , Psychology , Life , Social Representation , Paint , Perception , Personality , Personality Development , Philosophy , Architecture , Pleasure-Pain Principle , Politics , Psychology, Social , Psychomotor Agitation , Rejection, Psychology , Religion , Association , Research , Role , Sensation , Social Environment , Spiritualism , Thinking , Transference, Psychology , Unconscious, Psychology , Behavior , Humans , Symbolism , Adaptation, Psychological , Attitude , Catharsis , Comment , Mental Competency , Cognition , Communism , Conflict, Psychological , Congresses as Topic , Expressed Emotion , Self Psychology , Psychotherapeutic Processes , Drawing , Creativity , Cues , Culture , Dancing , Capitalism , Human Characteristics , Abreaction , Drama , Drive , Education , Emotions , Esthetics , Existentialism , Cultural Competency , Resilience, Psychological , Poetry , Pleasure , Social Norms , Science in the Arts , Freedom , Dialectical Behavior Therapy , Egocentrism , Group Processes , History , Individuality , Intelligence , Interpersonal Relations , Literature , Methods , Anthropology , Models, Theoretical , Morale , Motion Pictures , Motivation , Music
13.
Psicol. Educ. (Online) ; (54: Edição Especial): 96-106, 31/12/2022.
Article in English | LILACS, Index Psychology - journals | ID: biblio-1438496

ABSTRACT

This paper summarises a series of studies on the cultural-historical research methodology for studying child development, which was created by the author in developing Vygotsky's experimental-genetic method. This article presents the main traits of Vygotsky's experimental-genetic method and main principles of cultural-historical genetic research methodology. The article provides with several examples of experimental studies of the process of child development in contemporary research which show the cultural-historical research methodology in action. The article argues that this methodology is a genetic as it is focused on the process of development, it is a research methodology as it allows to formulate new types of research questions and finally, this is a cultural-historical methodology as it includes the system of concepts (theoretical analytical tools) and principles of research method (experimental method) which create a coherent unity. (AU)


Este artigo resume uma série de estudos sobre a metodologia de investigação histórico-Cultural para o estudo do desenvolvimento infantil, que foi criada pelo autor ao desenvolver o método genético experimental de Vygotsky. Este artigo apresenta as principais características do método experimental-genético de Vygotsky e os principais princípios da metodologia de investigação genética histórico-cultural. O artigo apresenta vários exemplos de estudos experimentais do processo de desenvolvimento infantil na investigação contemporânea que mostram a metodologia de investigação histórico-cultural em ação. O artigo argumenta que esta metodologia é uma metodologia genética, uma vez que se concentra no processo de desenvolvimento, é uma metodologia de investigação, uma vez que permite formular novos tipos de questões de investigação e, finalmente, é uma metodologia histórico-cultural, uma vez que inclui o sistema de conceitos (ferramentas analíticas teóricas) e princípios de método de investigação (método experimental) que criam uma unidade coerente. (AU)


Cet article résume une série d'études sur la méthodologie de recherche culturelle-historique pour l'étude du développement de l'enfant, qui a été créée par l'auteur lors du développement de la méthode expérimentale-génétique de Vygotsky. Cet article présente les principaux traits de la méthode expérimentale-génétique de Vygotsky et les grands principes de la méthodologie de recherche culturelle-historique-génétique. L'article fournit plusieurs exemples d'études expérimentales du processus de développement de l'enfant dans la recherche contemporaine qui montrent la méthodologie de recherche historico-culturelle en action. L'article soutient que cette méthodologie est génétique car elle est centrée sur le processus de développement, qu'elle est une méthodologie de recherche car elle permet de formuler de nouveaux types de questions de recherche et enfin, qu'il s'agit d'une méthodologie culturelle-historique car elle inclut le système de concepts (outils analytiques théoriques) et les principes de la méthode de recherche (méthode expérimentale) qui créent une unité cohérente.


Subject(s)
Humans , Child , Child Development , Social Environment , Methodology as a Subject
14.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 44(4): 53, 2022 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36319715

ABSTRACT

This paper reconstructs L.S. Vygotsky's account of anthropogenesis with respect to the work of anthropologist André Leroi-Gourhan and late philosopher Bernard Stiegler, situating Vygotsky as a forerunner to recent theories that posit cultural scaffolding and niche construction as the main drivers of human cognitive evolution. One might think there is an immediate affinity between Vygotsky and the techno-centric accounts of Leroi-Gourhan and Stiegler. Following Leroi-Gourhan, Stiegler argues that "technics" is the main driver in the anthropogenic development of "reflective consciousness." Vygotsky likewise claims that "psychological tools" are responsible for the development of uniquely human forms of consciousness. However, closer inspection reveals deep disparities between Vygotsky and the French thinkers. In Stiegler's philosophical redeployment of Leroi-Gourhan's anthropology, "reflective" cognition is the product of a prehistorical rupture in which some threshold of technical-cortical complexification is breached. For Vygotsky, on the other hand, the inverse scenario obtains. Technical development initially proceeds in tandem with the complexification of biologically based signaling behavior until the introduction of signs, which then radically restructure the cognitive apparatus. Due to inconsistencies regarding the equivalency of the technical and semiotic in Stiegler and Leroi-Gourhan, I advance a Vygotskian account where anthropogenesis is the result of semiotic rather than technical intervention. This aims to establish Vygotsky's "Cultural Historical" approach, and the Marxian-dialectical tradition from which he draws, as not only presaging recent naturalistic accounts of development, but offering a relevant theoretical program that may continue to inspire contemporary enculturated accounts of anthropogenesis.


Subject(s)
Anthropology , Language , Humans
15.
Sex Med ; 10(6): 100565, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36122542

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Doctors experience barriers in consultations that compromise engaging with patients on sensitive topics and impede history taking for sexual dysfunction. AIM: The aim of the study was to identify barriers to and facilitators of sexual history taking that primary care doctors experience during consultations involving patients with chronic illnesses. METHODS: This qualitative study formed part of a grounded theory study and represents individual interviews with 20 primary care doctors working in the rural North West Province, South Africa. The doctors were interviewed on the barriers and facilitators of sexual history taking they experienced during 151 recorded consultations with patients at risk of sexual dysfunction. Interviews were transcribed and line-by-line verbatim coding was done. A thematic analysis was performed using MaxQDA 2018 software for qualitative research. The study complied with COREQ requirements. OUTCOME: Doctors' reflections on sexual history taking. RESULTS: Three themes identifying barriers to sexual history taking emerged, namely personal and health system limitations, presuppositions and assumptions, and socio-cultural barriers. The fourth theme that emerged was the patient-doctor relationship as a facilitator of sexual history taking. Doctors experienced personal limitations such as a lack of training and not thinking about taking a history for sexual dysfunction. Consultations were compromised by too many competing priorities and socio-cultural differences between doctors and patients. The doctors believed that the patients had to take the responsibility to initiate the discussion on sexual challenges. Competencies mentioned that could improve the patient-doctor relationship to promote sexual history taking, include rapport building and cultural sensitivity. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Doctors do not provide holistic patient care at primary health care settings if they do not screen for sexual dysfunction. STRENGTH AND LIMITATIONS: The strength in this study is that recall bias was limited as interviews took place in a real-world setting, which was the context of clinical care. As this is a qualitative study, results will apply to primary care in rural settings in South Africa. CONCLUSION: Doctors need a socio-cognitive paradigm shift in terms of knowledge and awareness of sexual dysfunction in patients with chronic illness. Pretorius D, Mlambo MG, Couper ID. "We Are Not Truly Friendly Faces": Primary Health Care Doctors' Reflections on Sexual History Taking in North West Province. Sex Med 2022;10:100565.

16.
Neurosurg Focus ; 53(2): E8, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35916090

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There is no standard way in which physicians teach or evaluate surgical residents intraoperatively, and residents are proving to not be fully competent at core surgical procedures upon graduating. The Surgical Autonomy Program (SAP) is a novel educational model that combines a modified version of the Zwisch scale with Vygotsky's social learning theory. The objective of this study was to establish preliminary validity evidence that SAP is a reliable measure of autonomy and a useful tool for tracking competency over time. METHODS: The SAP breaks each surgical case into 4 parts, or zones of proximal development (ZPDs). Residents are evaluated on a 4-tier autonomy scale (TAGS scale) for each ZPD in every surgical case. Attendings were provided with a teaching session about SAP and identified appropriate ZPDs for surgical cases under their area of expertise. All neurosurgery residents at Duke University Hospital from July 2017 to July 2021 participated in this study. Chi-square tests and ordinal logistic regression were used for the analyses. RESULTS: Between 2017 and 2021, there were 4885 cases logged by 27 residents. There were 30 attendings who evaluated residents using SAP. Faculty completed evaluations on 91% of cases. The ZPD of focus directly correlated with year of residency (postgraduate year) (χ2 = 1221.1, df = 15, p < 0.001). The autonomy level increased with year of residency (χ2 = 3553.5, df = 15, p < 0.001). An ordinal regression analysis showed that for every year increase in postgraduate year, the odds of operating at a higher level of independence was 2.16 times greater (95% CI 2.11-2.21, p < 0.001). The odds of residents performing with greater autonomy was lowest for the most complex portion of the case (ZPD3) (OR 0.18, 95% CI 0.17-0.20, p < 0.001). Residents have less autonomy with increased case complexity (χ2 = 160.28, df = 6, p < 0.001). Compared with average cases, residents were more likely to operate with greater autonomy on easy cases (OR 1.44, 95% CI 1.29-1.61, p < 0.001) and less likely to do so on difficult cases (OR 0.72, 95% CI 0.67-0.77, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates preliminary evidence supporting the construct validity of the SAP. This tool successfully tracks resident autonomy and progress over time. The authors' smartphone application was widely used among surgical faculty and residents, supporting integration into the perioperative workflow. Wide implementation of SAP across multiple surgical centers will aid in the movement toward a competency-based residency education system.


Subject(s)
Internship and Residency , Neurosurgery , Clinical Competence , Education, Medical, Graduate , Humans , Professional Autonomy
17.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 56(4): 1091-1112, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35680721

ABSTRACT

At the social turn in education, Vygotsky's cultural-historical/sociocultural theory (VST) has become particularly influential. There are other cultural-historical traditions associated with VST, including Leontiev's and Engeström's versions of cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT). These approaches are frequently conflated, resulting in confusion that can be consequential in interpreting educational research findings. Unravelling these frameworks is thus an important and urgent task. In addressing this gap, the paper first provides an overview of the origins and fundamental tenets of these cultural-historical perspectives, followed by a critical evaluation of and comparison among them. Implications for utilising these cultural-historical traditions are discussed.

18.
Front Psychol ; 13: 781730, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35360561

ABSTRACT

By following the arguments developed by Vygotsky and employing the cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) in addition to dialectical logic, this paper attempts to investigate the interaction between psychology and artificial intelligence (AI) to confront the epistemological and methodological challenges encountered in AI research. The paper proposes that AI is facing an epistemological and methodological crisis inherited from psychology based on dualist ontology. The roots of this crisis lie in the duality between rationalism and objectivism or in the mind-body rupture that has governed the production of scientific thought and the proliferation of approaches. In addition, by highlighting the sociohistorical conditions of AI, this paper investigates the historical characteristics of the shift of the crisis from psychology to AI. Additionally, we examine the epistemological and methodological roots of the main challenges encountered in AI research by noting that empiricism is the dominant tendency in the field. Empiricism gives rise to methodological and practical challenges, including challenges related to the emergence of meaning, abstraction, generalization, the emergence of symbols, concept formation, functional reflection of reality, and the emergence of higher psychological functions. Furthermore, through discussing attempts to formalize dialectical logic, the paper, based on contradiction formation, proposes a qualitative epistemological, methodological, and formal alternative by using a preliminary algorithmic model that grasps the formation of meaning as an essential ability for the qualitative reflection of reality and the emergence of other mental functions.

19.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 56(4): 1072-1090, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34599458

ABSTRACT

Some problems, unraveled, seem to resolve each other. The Soviet integrative psychologist Vygotsky bequeathed to us an unfinished paper on the emotions. But was it about the teachings of Spinoza, was it concerned with contemporaneous theories, or did Vygotsky have a teaching/theory of his own? Vygotsky called his approach "Spinozian but not Spinozist" in his notes, but in his actual writings this appears as a distinction without a difference. What did he mean by it? In many places, Vygotsky appears to be retracing his steps rather than proceeding to a conclusion, yet he was already considering a title and a dedicatee. Was it really finishable? This paper argues that Vygotsky intended to use the teachings of Spinoza to critique his colleagues and associates; that he turned the critique back on "Spinozism" itself, and that the theory he intended to construct would be properly called "Spinozian". In the end, however, only practice can resolve the Spinozist teaching on emotions into the kind of working Spinozian theory Vygotsky had in mind; only real data will help us tie up the last loose threads. To this end, a linguistic approach to the problem of how the concept of sexual consent develops in Korean children is proposed.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Child , Humans , Republic of Korea
20.
Psychol Russ ; 15(4): 188-214, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36761709

ABSTRACT

Background: This paper presents the results of a study into the breadth, dynamics, and diversity of the interdisciplinary branch of cultural-historical psychology. The scatter of thematic areas within the cultural-historical approach indicates the urgent need to continue a systematic and holistic analysis of research related to cultural-historical topics in the context of its various directions and research groups. Design: A bibliometric analysis of scientific publications indexed by the Web of Science CC was carried out for the 2010-2020 period . Our previous bibliographic study (Rubtsov et al., 2019) revealed that the number of publications on cultural-historical psychology and citations of them, has recently increased, although unevenly. Results: According to our results, the number of publications on cultural-historical psychology is growing unevenly; publications from Russia and the United States made up almost equal shares of the sample, and third place was taken by England, followed by Finland and Sweden. The top 10 journals fell into two subject areas: Psychology and Education and Educational Research. With regard to the geographical location of the publishing houses of the top 10 journals, the highest number was taken by England and Russia. The dominant areas of research were teacher education, university education, and learning activity. Conclusion: The most frequently used terms were Vygotsky, activity approach, CHAT, CHP, ZPD, and learning activity.

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