Dr. Dana Suskind
@drdanasuskind.bsky.social
190 followers 180 following 56 posts
Surgeon. Co-Director of University of Chicago's TMW Center for Early Learning + Public Health. Mom. NYT bestselling author of 'Parent Nation' and 'Thirty Million Words'
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drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Artificial Intelligence is not just technology. It’s an artificial biologic with tremendous population health implications—both promising and perilous.

In today’s TIME magazine, I call for AI engineers to take a Hippocratic Oath promising, first, to do no harm.

time.com/7312350/ai-e...
AI Engineers Need Their Own Hippocratic Oath
"We need a Hinton Oath: not to slow engineers down, but to guide them with the same moral clarity."
time.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Babies are born to bond with other humans. When they bond, instead, with human-like AI systems, we don’t yet know what that means for their brain development. But we do know caution is warranted.

Thank you to the Brookings Institution for publishing our commentary

www.brookings.edu/articles/pol...
Policy guardrails needed as babies around the world begin to interact with AI | Brookings
Kathy Hisrh-Pasek and co-authors outline the potential risks that artificial intelligence poses to children's development.
www.brookings.edu
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
The FTC studying the impact of AI chatbots on children’s mental health is good, overdue news.

Just as we set guardrails for food and medicine that reach children, we need guidelines and transparency standards for AI companions before they flood the marketplace.
www.wsj.com/tech/ai/ftc-...
Exclusive | FTC Prepares to Question AI Companies Over Impact on Children
The regulator is expected to send letters to makers of AI chatbots.
www.wsj.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Artificial Intelligence is not just technology. It’s an artificial biologic with tremendous population health implications—both promising and perilous.

In today’s TIME magazine, I call for AI engineers to take a Hippocratic Oath promising, first, to do no harm.

time.com/7312350/ai-e...
AI Engineers Need Their Own Hippocratic Oath
"We need a Hinton Oath: not to slow engineers down, but to guide them with the same moral clarity."
time.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
'The teenage brain is still developing—particularly in regions of impulse control and risk assessment—making young people less equipped to judge the accuracy or safety of advice.'

We simply can't allow children's brains to be testing grounds for unregulated AI.

www.nytimes.com/2025/08/25/o...
Opinion | Teens Are Using Chatbots as Therapists. That’s Alarming.
www.nytimes.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Grateful to @familiesinschools.bsky.social for engaging me in this important dialogue around AI and early childhood.

If we are to avoid the same mistakes we made with social media, we need robust research into AI’s effects on developing brains. Now.

www.familiesinschools.org/2025/08/13/a...
Paying Attention to Big Tech: AI & Early Childhood - Families In Schools
www.familiesinschools.org
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
“Here is where AI’s agreeability – so crucial to its rapid adoption – becomes its Achille's heel. Its tendency to value short-term user satisfaction over truthfulness – to blow digital smoke up one’s skirt – can isolate users and reinforce confirmation bias.”

www.nytimes.com/2025/08/18/o...
Opinion | What My Daughter Told ChatGPT Before She Took Her Life
www.nytimes.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
American families need more support to flourish. My colleagues from the Convergence Collaborative on Supports for Working Families and I urge Congress and the Administration to establish a National Commission on Children and Families for the 21st Century.

Read our issue brief: lnkd.in/ghG3niVJ
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
'AI policy should advance AI innovation by ensuring that its potential benefits are responsibly realized and widely shared.'

Important guidance from a multidisciplinary group of AI policy experts, calling for an emphasis on scientific understanding over hype.

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Advancing science- and evidence-based AI policy
Policy must be informed by, but also facilitate the generation of, scientific evidence
www.science.org
Reposted by Dr. Dana Suskind
johnlist.bsky.social
Few things can make a father prouder than his daughter changing the world....by teaching about field experiments at the World Youth Economic Forum!
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
I decided to throw my hat into the ring for #SXSWEDU 2026, where I'm hoping to present concrete principles for responsible use of AI in early childhood. My panel is called BORN TO BE WIRED 😉

Do me a favor and vote for it in the #PanelPicker!

participate.sxsw.com/flow/sxsw/sx...
PanelPicker | SXSW Conference & Festivals
PanelPicker® is the official SXSW user-generated session proposal platform. Enter ideas and vote to help shape Conference programming for SXSW and SXSW EDU.
participate.sxsw.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
I’m glad to see @unicef.org updating its guidance on AI and children, especially the potential risks when AI offers companionship.

When children’s attachment systems are activated by algorithms rather than caregivers, we’re in uncharted territory.
www.unicef.org/innocenti/st...
The risky new world of tech's friendliest bots
AI companions and children
www.unicef.org
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Your baby doesn’t need fancy toys or gadgets for healthy brain development. What they need most is lots and lots of your words and nurturing interaction.

Grateful to The Bump for letting me weigh in here 🩷

www.thebump.com/a/newborn-toys
7 Best Newborn Toys, Tested by babies in 2025
Shopping for baby's first toy? Check out our favorite newborn toys, tested by babies aged between 4 and 10 weeks and rated by their parents.
www.thebump.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
“We have never established that good child care belongs among the pantheon of American values.”

So true! The first 5 years are the most rapid period of brain development and the foundation for, well, everything.

Great interview here with @ehaspel.bsky.social.

hechingerreport.org/why-american...
New book argues child care is a ‘societal imperative’
In ‘Raising a Nation,’ researcher Elliot Haspel says everyone should want strong supports for early childhood, even those without children.
hechingerreport.org
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
I’m grateful to @axios.com for tackling this topic and allowing me to weigh in. We need to be extremely intentional about the tech we introduce to young children, whose brains are at risk of being wired away from the relationships so central to our humanity.

www.axios.com/2025/07/21/a...
Chatting with bots could rewire the youngest brains
As chatbots enter children's lives, pediatricians warn that the interactions could alter their development.
www.axios.com
Reposted by Dr. Dana Suskind
outthinkmedia.bsky.social
Best quote for parents struggling with an AI powered toy:
Reposted by Dr. Dana Suskind
outthinkmedia.bsky.social
What do my kids need to know about AI? or "Mattel, I have questions."

What if I was that new mother, over a decade ago, desperately searching for answers as to how to be a "good" mother? I would have been tempted.
Hear from Dr. Dana Suskind, leading child development expert at the Univ. of Chicago
What do my kids need to know about AI? or “Mattel, I have questions.”
What if I was that new mother, over a decade ago, desperately searching for answers as to how to be a "good" mother? I would have been tempted.
outthinkmedia.com
Reposted by Dr. Dana Suskind
datasociety.bsky.social
AI is already impacting children’s developing brains in profound ways, and kids’ wellbeing is not at the center of tech industry innovation, @drdanasuskind.bsky.social writes‬. “Every time we replace a human with AI, we risk rewiring how a child relates to the world.” thehill.com/opinion/tech...
thehill.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
I’m grateful to The Hill for publishing my oped calling for more information on AI’s impact on early brain development.

Tech can be a powerful force for good—as a cochlear implant surgeon, I rely on it to help children hear! But we must apply it with intention...especially in early childhood.
thehill.com
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
So what does this all mean?

Kids don’t just trust robots — they form social bonds with them. As tech companies design robots for education, therapy, and home use, they’re not just building tools — they’re shaping kids’ companions ... and future generations’ brains 🧠
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Robots weren’t just trusted for knowledge. Kids wanted them as friends, teachers, even secret-keepers. Trust in robots was strongest in younger kids, but even older ones showed bias toward robots.
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
And when the robot made mistakes, kids still liked it more than the human. They believed the robot didn’t mean to mess up. They said humans make mistakes “on purpose,” but robots don’t...
drdanasuskind.bsky.social
Children ages 3–6 watched a robot and a human label familiar and unfamiliar objects. When a robot and a human both give the right answer, kids STILL prefer to ask the robot questions...