Following the smash critical and box-office success
of Toy Story in 1995, Emeryville's
Pixar was under intense pressure to make another artistically amazing,
financially lucrative film. But the 1997 production for the sequel, Toy Story 2 1997 production was troubled for a
number of reasons, and the creative staff found themselves putting in long
hours under a highly compressed production schedule.
A third of Toy Story 2's animators wound up suffering
carpal tunnel syndrome or repetitive stress injuries. But the gravest
consequences occurred when an artist, in a mental haze, forgot to drop off his
infant at daycare. Several hours later, he remembered that his baby was in the
backseat of is car.
Fortunately, rescue workers were able to
"revive" the child, said Pixar President and founder Ed Catmull.
The Pixar chief, who is also president of Disney Animation Studios, recounted this near tragedy in an
interview this week on KQED’s Forum. It was a show devoted to Catmull’s book Creativity Inc. and lessons Pixar learned over the years about how to nurture a creative,
productive workforce.
His story about Pixar workers pushed themselves to states of
physical and mental burn-out – with the life of an employee’s child put at risk
– comes amid a summer of intense awareness around babies and young children
dying in hot cars.
A car's temperature can rise
rapidly in the hot
sun -- topping 120 degrees inside, on an 80-degree day. So far in
the United States in 2014, at least 21 kids have died in hot-car related
incidents, the Washington Post reported.
Who leaves a child in a hot car, the story asks. "Parents on their way to work sometimes do it. So do parents who are rushing to the restroom or tackling odds and ends around the house. Sometimes, drowsy parents nod off; sometimes the parent (allegedly) smokes pot, eats pizza and watches HBO unaware of the looming tragedy."
Who leaves a child in a hot car, the story asks. "Parents on their way to work sometimes do it. So do parents who are rushing to the restroom or tackling odds and ends around the house. Sometimes, drowsy parents nod off; sometimes the parent (allegedly) smokes pot, eats pizza and watches HBO unaware of the looming tragedy."
In 2010, the Post won a Pulitzer Prize for Feature
Writing for “Fatal Distraction,” a story that looks at how a host of factors
are contributing to this deadly and particularly modern-day phenomenon.
Kids dying in hot cars was a relatively rare
situation until the 1990s, writer Gene Weingarten reports. That’s when
car-safety experts declared that passenger-side front airbags could kill
children, so they recommended that child seats be moved to the back of the car;
“then, for even more safety for the very young,” baby seats were pivoted to
face the rear.”
“If few foresaw the tragic consequence
of the lessened visibility of the child . . . well, who can blame them?” asked
Weingarten. “What kind of person forgets a baby?
According to Weingarten, “death by hyperthermia,” the official designation for these sorts of cases, sometimes happens when an otherwise loving, attentive parent on day gets busy, or distracted, or upset, or confused by a change in his or her daily routine, and then just forgets the child is in the car. Weingarten reports that this situation happens in the United States 15 to 25 a year.
Emerging research on how the brain keeps
track of information shows how these attention
lapses occur, Weingarten reports.
He
interviewed David Diamond, a professor of molecular physiology at the University of South
Florida, who
had this to say:
“In situations involving familiar,
routine motor skills, the human animal presses the basal ganglia into service
as a sort of auxiliary autopilot. When our prefrontal cortex and hippocampus
are planning our day on the way to work, the ignorant but efficient basal
ganglia is operating the car; that’s why you’ll sometimes find yourself having
driven from point A to point B without a clear recollection of the route you
took, the turns you made or the scenery you saw.”
Ordinarily, Diamond told Weingarten,
this delegation of duty “works beautifully.” But sudden or chronic stress can
weaken the brain’s higher-functioning centers. A certain combination of factors
show up in cases of parents forgetting their children in cars: stress,
emotion, lack of sleep and change in routine.
“That’s
when the basal ganglia is trying to do what it’s supposed to do, and the
conscious mind is too weakened to resist,” Diamond said. “What happens is that
the memory circuits in a vulnerable hippocampus literally get overwritten, like
with a computer program. Unless the memory circuit is rebooted—such as if the
child cries, or, you know, if the wife mentions the child in the back — it can
entirely disappear.”
Of
course, not all cases of
infant hyperthermia involve situations of “simple but bewildering lapses of
memory,” Weingarten writes.
In other cases there is a history of
prior neglect or substance abuse or when parents knowingly leave their children
in the car. An Oakland woman is facing two misdemeanor child endangerment
charges after leaving her two children, 2 and 3, strapped in their car safety
seats in July, while she went into a Livermore casino to gamble, the Contra Costa Times reported.
Weingarten quotes a national childs’ safety
advocacy group that in about 40 percent of cases of child hyperthermia,
authorities determine that the child’s death was an accident. In the other 60
percent of cases, authorities decide that the negligence was so great that the
parents should be aggressively prosecuted.
High tech wants to come to the rescue to help
harried, distracted parents remember their kids, inventing “smart car seats,”
wireless monitors or sensors in cars that detect motion or levels of carbon
dioxide.
The National Highway Safety Administration offers these low-tech
suggestions: Always check the front and back seats of the car before you lock
it and leave and put your purse, briefcase or something else you need to take
with you next to the car seat so you won’t forget to check.
Pixar’s near-tragedy during the Toy Story 2
production prompted the company to rethink its work processes, not so much out
of concern over the unlikely scenario that another worker would forget her child
in the Pixar parking lot, but just to take better care of its most valuable assets: their employees. “We realized we had let this go too far down the
path,” Catmull said. “We had to change behavior. We had to train people to take
care of themselves physically.”
3 comments:
Thanks for sharing this. It could save many lives.
Thanks great bllog post
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