Parenting in the Age of AI: Baby Tech, Screen Time, and Development Science
Parenting has always been overwhelming. Adding an AI-powered baby monitor to the mix doesn’t necessarily help. Six episodes navigated the intersection of child development science and consumer technology.
Watching the Baby
- Eyes on the Move reviewed the current generation of smart baby monitors — cameras with sleep tracking, breathing detection, cry analysis, and movement alerts. The hosts evaluated which features are genuinely useful (high-resolution night vision, reliable alerts) vs. anxiety-inducing noise (oxygen estimation from camera-based pulse detection that isn’t medical-grade).
Beyond the Diaper Log
- Beyond the Diaper Log explored AI-powered milestone tracking apps that compare your child’s development against statistical norms. The hosts made a nuanced case: these tools can flag genuine delays that benefit from early intervention, but they can also turn normal developmental variation into unnecessary parental anxiety.
Physical Safety
- Tiny Humans, Big Hazards was pure practical advice for small-space living. Outlet covers and cabinet locks are obvious; the episode covered less intuitive hazards: furniture tipping forces, cord strangulation risks, and the specific geometry of falls from different heights. The hosts provided a room-by-room audit checklist.
The Science of Development
- Inside the Infant Mind went deep on neuroscience — the six-month milestone where object permanence, social referencing, and early language processing converge. Understanding what’s actually happening in a baby’s brain at each stage helps parents distinguish between concerning delays and normal asynchronous development.
The Screen Time Debate
- The Screen Time Dilemma reviewed the actual research, not the headlines. The evidence is more nuanced than “screens are bad”: interactive content with caregiver co-viewing has measurably different effects than passive background TV. The hosts broke down what the AAP and WHO recommendations actually say, where the evidence is strong, and where it’s surprisingly thin.
The Daycare Decision
- The Daycare Dilemma tackled the question every parent agonizes over: when and whether to start daycare. The hosts reviewed longitudinal studies on socialization benefits, cortisol levels in infants at different care arrangements, and the uncomfortable reality that the “right” answer depends heavily on individual temperament and care quality.
Parenting doesn’t come with a manual, but it does come with data. These episodes help parents separate evidence-based guidance from marketing hype and cultural pressure.
Episodes in this playlist
February 2026
#515 The Video Deficit Effect: Why Toddlers Learn from Grandma but Not from TV Explore the real impact of screens on developing brains and why "educational" videos might actually hinder learning in early childhood. Feb 6, 2026
January 2026
#394 The Myth of Baby Socialization Is your baby getting enough socialization at home? Herman and Corn dive into the science of "serve and return" and the ideal timing for daycare. Jan 31, 2026
#378 From Observer to Explorer: The Six-Month Leap What's happening inside a baby's brain at six months? Explore the sensory explosion of depth perception, language mapping, and synaptic growth. Jan 30, 2026
#228 Baby Proofing a Tiny Jerusalem Apartment Is your coffee table a "jagged monolith"? Herman and Corn share essential baby-proofing tips for small apartments and curious crawlers. Jan 14, 2026
#227 Beyond the Diaper Log: Parenting in the Age of AI Stop tracking every milliliter and start understanding the "why." Herman and Corn explore how AI and developmental science can save new parents. Jan 14, 2026
#152 Dome vs. PTZ: The Hidden Tech of Baby Monitoring Herman and Corn explore the best camera tech for tracking a crawling baby, from dual-lens systems to AI-powered motion detection. Jan 4, 2026