There's going to be a new website on the nets: brainfacts.org
The site is funded by the Society for Neuroscience and is considered an "initiative of the Kavli Foundation and the Gatsby Charitable Foundation." It's goal os to make emergent neuroscience research available to the public.
I'm curious about this new initiative for many reasons, not least of which is the rhetoric used to describe it's scope and purpose: a February 16th (2011) press release from the Society for Neuroscience calls brainfacts.org "a unique nonprofit online source for authoritative public information about the progress and promise of brain research." The trouble evidenced here for many scholars--not to mention practitioners and the public audience--is the unidirectional narrative of progress. Brain research is not about cautious investigation; it does not hinge on questions of 'personhood' (Dumit 2004), selfhood, or 'brainhood' (Vidal 2004); nor is it a process of fits and starts and paradigm shifts. Instead, we now have it on good authority that brain research is simply about progress and promise.
That said, I think we will all be watching to see exactly what kinds of information are deemed acceptable for a general audience. And how the new site will fulfill its mission: "Over time, the site will complement and leverage the field’s global commitment to public information by integrating multimedia resources from leading neuroscience centers worldwide. Moreover, in an era where scientific misinformation is rampant, BrainFacts.org content will be evaluated by leading scientists to ensure accuracy and to help dispel “neuromyths,” which range from poorly interpreted concepts of “left-brain or right-brain learners” to inaccurate claims of links between autism and childhood vaccines." One wonders how many of these so-called 'neuromyths' were once the working objects of neuroscience itself.
Clearly, brainfacts.org will be a site to watch in the coming years.
The original press release from Society of Neuroscience is available here.
Brainfacts.org
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