1 / 31

Genie: A Scientific Tragedy

Genie: A Scientific Tragedy. Book: Russ Rymer Presentation: Courtney Neis. Irene. Genie’s Mother Atlus , OK Felt she had 2 sets of parents – Mamaw an Dadaw Close to her mother Drought Move to Southern California Father found job at filling station, little hope for kids

nyoko
Télécharger la présentation

Genie: A Scientific Tragedy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genie: A Scientific Tragedy Book: Russ Rymer Presentation: Courtney Neis

  2. Irene • Genie’s Mother • Atlus, OK • Felt she had 2 sets of parents – Mamaw an Dadaw • Close to her mother • Drought • Move to Southern California • Father found job at filling station, little hope for kids • Non-traditional solution to poverty

  3. Clark • Genie’s Father • Rough life • Unemployed • WWII – worked in aircraft assembly line

  4. Marriage and Kids • Early years appeared to be happy • Clark was jealous and overprotective • “My life came to an end on my wedding day” – Irene • Clark didn’t want kids • Four children – only 2 survived • Child 1 • Irene beat during pregnancy • Crying infuriated Clark • Died at 2.5 months • Child 2 - RH blood poisoning • Child 3 • Healthy boy • Development hindered – Neglect • Saved by paternal grandmother • Child 4 – Genie • RH blood poisoning • Development hindered

  5. Clark’s Mother • Clark was largely attached to his mother, despite not being there during childhood. • Supported him until he got job as a machinist • Irene thought she was making a pest of herself • December 1958 – The Accident. Clark’s mother got hit by a car while crossing the street with her grandson to buy an ice cream cone. • Afterwards, Clark started to change and was severely depressed • A world without his mother, a world that did not care to adequately punish his mother’s murderer, was a world he could live without • Clark quit job and moved his family into his mother’s house

  6. Home Life • Irene was largely dependent on Clark because of her blindness • Son was allowed outside of house for very little • Sleeping arrangements – living room • Clark dreaded people taking advantage of his daughter • Pediatrician pronounced her “a retarded little girl with kernicterus” • Clark believed his daughter was profoundly retarded and needed protection from evil of the world

  7. Genie’s Home Life • Confined to a small bedroom in back of house, harnessed to an infant’s potty seat • Left to sit on a chair – unable to move her fingers, hands, feet, or toes • At night, placed in sleeping bag which was stationed to hold her arms stationary and placed in a crib with wire mesh sides and a wire mesh cover on top • Little auditory stimulation – no TV or radio. • Wasn’t allowed to make any noises

  8. Genie’s Home Life cnt. • Little to look at or touch – no carpet or pictures in room, windows covered • “Entertainment” • Two raincoats, “Partly Edited” copies of TV log, Cottage Cheese containe, Spool of thread • Diet • Baby foods, Cereal, Soft boiled egg • Clark was convinced she’d die before 12 • Promised Irene she could seek help for Genie if she lived past 12

  9. Found • Irene was searching for office of “Service for Blind” but accidentally stumbled into the general social services office • 90% blind in left eye and 100% blind in right eye • Social worker originally thought Genie was autistic • Genie’s condition when found • 50 lbs • Incontinent – no control over urination/defecation • Couldn’t chew solid food/could hardly swallow • Couldn’t focus eyes beyond 12 feet • Salivated constantly • Had almost 2 complete sets of teeth • Showed no perception of heat/cold • Couldn’t do anything requiring full extension of legs (hop, skip, climb) • Vocab – probably less than 20 words

  10. The Aftermath • Clark and Irene were arrested and charged with child abuse • Admitted to the Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles • Clark committed suicide on the court date • He left 2 notes – nothing for his wife or daughter • For the police: “My son is out front with friends. He hasn’t the slightest idea of what is going to happen” • For his son: “Don’t take that shirt back. It’s for my funeral. You know where my blue shirt is. Underwear in hall closet. I love you. Good bye and be good – Dad” • Irene got off on a not guilty plea

  11. New People in Genie’s Life • Susan Curtiss & Victoria Fromkin • Susan was a 1st year grad student in linguistics department studying language acquisition when her faculty advisor, Victoria Fromkin, invited her into the case • David Rigler • David was a professor of pediatrics and psychology at University of Southern California and the chief psychologist in the hospital’s psychiatric division

  12. New People in Genie’s Life • James Kent (top right) • One of the hospital psychologists who visited Genie the first day she arrived • “As far as I’m concerned Genie was the most profoundly damaged child I’ve ever seen” • Jay Shurley(bottom left) • One of the first outside consultants to visit Genie from Texas • Brought 600 lbs of equipment for investigating brain activity Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLCqeYKPnpc :30 Bunny Walk 5:40 Talking 12:30 19:10

  13. Critical Period & Language Acquisition • Nature or Nurture • Noam Chomsky – Language Acquisition Device (LAD) • Eric Lenneberg – Critical Period

  14. Genie’s Progress in the Hospital • Mental and physical abilities improved quickly • She seemed oblivious to the people fighting over her • After 2 weeks she was released to the hospital’s rehabilitation center • Starting to develop a sense of self • Starting to obtain speech • Showing remarkable progress on intelligence tests • May 1971 – consultants got together to consider her future under the terms of the NIMH contract • Therapy or Research? Opinions?

  15. The Testing Begins • June 4, 1971 – Genie meets Curtis and Fromkin • New linguistic examinations • One of the most tested children in history • Genie spoke very little – whimpers or squeaks The first publicly released picture of Genie, taken just after California authorities took control of her care at the age of 13.

  16. Genie’s Summer with Jean Butler • Jean volunteered to take Genie on field trips • Jean developed Rubella • July 7 – “Isolation” Genie went to life with Jean • Genie was happy and progressing well • Dispute with the “Genie Team” • Jean – overprotective, restricting visits • Genie Team – ambitious and insensitive • Jean applied to be Genie’s foster parent

  17. Genie with David and Marilyn Rigler • Genie’s new home – scientist on the case • 3 children, a cat, golden retriever puppy • Genie was regressing • Grant money and funding • David Riglerreleased from work at hospital

  18. More Progress at the Rigler’s • Curtiss visited daily • Uncooperative • Compressing sentences • “Monday Curtis come” = “Munkuh” – The Great Abbreviator • Verbally slow • Marilyn Rigler– unofficially in charge of teaching Genie how to behave • Taught Genie how to chew food • Enrolled in nursery school and later public school for the mentally retarded • Speech therapy and some sign language • “Genie Happy”

  19. Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association • Anniversary of Genies arrival in foster home • Symposium – chaired by David Rigler • Howard Hansen – paper of Genies early life • James Kent – 8 months in hospital • Marilyn Rigler – the past year “Adventure: At Home with Genie” • Fromkin, Curtis, and Krashen – Genie’s language skills • Development indicated language acquisition can occur after 5 and the onset of puberty • Dubunk Eric Lenneberg’s theory? • Lenneberg had no interest in studying Genie

  20. Summary of Progress • Difference between singular and plural nouns • Difference between positive and negative sentences • Some prepositions • Understood yes/no questions • Somewhat use possessives

  21. Summary of Progress Cnt. • Normal children quickly learn how to form negative sentences – Genie was stuck in the beginning stage for almost 3 years • Couldn’t ask a real question • Ex: “Where is may I have a penny?” • Problem with pronouns • “I” her favorite • “You” and “Me” were interchangeable • Skill leveled out almost immediately • Failures made many believe Genie was retarded • Curtis was not convinced – she was smart • She could categorize – some thought key to learning language • Advanced in mental age • “Being with Genie wasn’t like being with a retarded person. It was like being with a disturbed person. She was the most disturbed person I’d ever met. But the lights were on. There was somebody home.” - Curtiss

  22. Video (7:30) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjZolHCrC8E#t=382

  23. Trips to Temple City • Most promising case of 20th century to perhaps one of the most tested children in history • NIMH found the lack of progress troubling • One year extension • Rigler applied for another grant • Application was denied • “Very little progress has been made” • “The research goals projected probably will not be realized” • On the “bright” side… • Without funds, Riglers would have to terminate their foster relationship with Genie

  24. New Homes For Genie • Home to Irene • Irene found it difficult to live with her daughter • Riglers had some money to help – summer camp • November 7 – new foster home • Irene’s visits were seen as disruptions • Genie regressed – seemingly intentionally • Quit speaking – fear of vomiting • At a poolside BBQ they saw how bad Genie had regressed • “I want live back in Marilyn house”

  25. A new grant – more testing • Genie was placed back in the hospital for two weeks and then entered a new foster home • Temporary home over the Christmas holiday • Another “permanent home” • One home refused visitation • Curtis advocated for Genie • Letter to John Miner • March 20, 1978 – Irene regained control of her daughter

  26. Curtiss’ Dissertation • Irene’s reaction • Hurt by the term “Wild Child” • “It made me sick at the stomach. I was sick you know, when I saw those things, you know, in print. It takes a lot to make me sick” – reaction to description of Genie’s home life • Irene’s “corrections” • I was not frequently beaten, 2 times in the last year. He did try to kill me 1 time • Genie was able to move her arms, legs, bend forward and to the side • Genie was able to move her arms with the sleeping bag on, it was not a straitjacket. It was an oversized infant’s crib with wire screen around the sides. There was a wire screen on top but I never used it. • Genie did hear speech, our home is very small. • Her father did not beat her • Her father did not bark to her face • Most Importantly: Genie was not forgotten

  27. The Lawsuit • October 1979 – lawsuit accusing – Hansen, Knapp, David Rigler, James Kent, Susan Curtiss, and the children’s hospital • Accused them of multiple infractions of patient-therapist and patient-physician confidentiality • Accused scientists of performing unethical human experimentation • Faulted John Miner for not protecting Genie from harm while he was her guardian • Asking for compensatory and punitive damages

  28. Reactions to the Lawsuit • Testing regimen of 60-70 hours/week • It was fun, Genie thought most of this as a game • Susan Curtis - “My test periods were never more than 45 minutes on a given day, the rest was playing, going for walks, just being friends” • Scientists were shocked • David Rigler– The mystery became clear for him • Jean Butler • Jean stayed in the shadows • Irene didn’t sound like herself

  29. Lawsuit (continued) • Case lasted 6 years • Time dulled the complaint • Case finally almost settled – Jean wanted Irene to decline the offer • Complaint was “dismissed” or rather “upheld” • Curtiss agreed to direct a program for Genie • Children’s hospital agreed to give yearly physical and psychiatric evaluations • Full access to and use of Genie’s records were granted • Curtis relinquished the fund she had set aside for Genie • No other financial penalties

  30. Where is Genie now? • Adult foster care home • Southern California • Little is known about current condition • Private investigator - happy • Jay Shurley’s visits • Largely silent • Depressed • Chronically intitutionalized

  31. Discussion • Reactions/Thoughts? • What kind of problems do you think arose having Rigler as a scientist on her case and one of her primary care givers? • What could they have done, or what would you do differently, that would have benefited Genie in better ways? • If this were a case today, how do you think it would be handled? • How should the ethics of a case such as this be handled?

More Related