Abstract
This paper analyses how talk between researchers and their volunteer human subjects works to construct a safe and supportive environment in a laboratory setting where women volunteers participate in the development of a new imaging technology with potential for diagnosing breast cancer. Drawing on discourse analysis perspectives, we explore the work talk has to do in order to facilitate the instrumental, ethical and social dimensions of the interaction between researchers, volunteers and technology. An important cross-cutting theme is the use of various discursive strategies by both researchers and volunteers to manage perceptions of risk and construct a safe research environment, which will foster the active cooperation from volunteers necessary to achieve successful research outcomes. We draw attention to the interactive and two-way character of the technology talk observed in our research setting and how it co-produces researchers, volunteer subjects and the technology and supports the working social relationship between them that is vital to success.
Acknowledgements
We should like to thank all the volunteers and researchers who contributed to this study and gratefully acknowledge the financial support of ESRC (RES-000-22-0093 and RES-000-23-1160). Special thanks also to Megan Clinch for her help and advice in the latter stages of development of the paper.
Notes
1. We use the term ‘volunteers’ to cover all the women who agreed to be human research subjects (or ‘research participants’) in the study, whether patients or ‘healthy volunteers.’
2. Term used by IIPV39, see ‘Ethical talk’, p.105.