Is there anything worse than a Harvard stage mother? No, there is not. When I was an undergraduate and saw all the babies going to do experiments in William James Hall, I vowed that someday my kids would do the same. But in the haze of postpartum life I forgot my promise to myself. Until a letter arrived from Harvard's Baby Lab when Little Man was around 6 months. I immediately signed him up and he did his first experiment within weeks.
The next month I got a letter from Boston College's Infant & Child Cognition Laboratory so I also signed him up for experiments there. He loved their lab, where he found one of his all-time favorite toys (an activity table), and started a collection of Infant Scientist certificates (he's now received a post-doc in infant science and he's an Advanced Scholar, natch).
That got the social scientist and writer in my thinking about other experimental opportunities in Boston. I quickly discovered that I could sign Carston up for experiments at other area institutions, like Boston Children's Hospital and University of Massachusetts-Boston. We'd officially joined what I dubbed the "Boston baby experiment circuit" and I had the motivation for my next article.
That article is in this month's Boston Magazine. It's even featured on the cover!
Click HERE to read the web version of the article or HERE to see the published version in the Magazine.
I mentioned the article to my friends at NECN's The Morning Show, where I am a regular guest, and they decided to follow Carston as he did an experiment at Boston College's Lab.
Carston *loved* being on camera, as you can see:
He also loved anchor Bridget Blythe, of course.
Here's his big TV debut!
(You can also link to the clip and story by clicking HERE.)
Also, I swear that the sensor cap doesn't bother Carston at all. They used an unsmiling (but nonetheless cute, of course) pic of my guy for the story, but here is one of my all-time favorite images of him smiling in an experiment:
He's even happy when he has "octopus kisses" after getting his cap off!
I have apparently raised a rather vain Little Man though; he was completely obsessed and mystified by seeing himself on TV this morning.
He even checked out the picture of himself watching himself (this is getting very meta and says a lot about screens in our society, I'm sure):
Carston, the Infant Scientist, thinks it would be an interesting experiment to see what kids his age think about seeing moving images of themselves...