What are the 6 ethical issues
Deception Informed consent Protection of participants from physical and psychological harm The right to withdraw The right to withdraw data Confidentiality and Privacy
Give examples of studies involving deception
Asch
Milgram
Cruchfield
What estimate of studies use no deception and who found this?
Menges
3% use no deception at all
How could deception be seen as always negative, despite the benefits?
It prevents informed consent. Researchers have an obligation to protect their participants and psychologists should be seen as professional and therefore trustworthy.
What should a debrief do?
Why can’t informed consent be given when deception is required?
Because informed consent involves the participants giving their consent in full knowledge of the aims of the study and the expectations of them. Not possible if things need to be kept from them
What are the exceptions to giving consent?
What are the guidelines for physical harm as an ethical issue?
Not to expose participants to anymore risk of harm than they would in day to day life
What examples of psychological harm could result from experiments
Embarrassment
Loss of self esteem
Stress
Anxiety
How do psychologists protect their participants from psychological harm?
Using confidentiality
What are the guidelines for confidentiality?
Participants are not identified unless they give their permission and various methods may be used to disguise their identity. For example in case studies patients may be identified only by their initials such as KF or HM.
List 5 ways in which ethical issues can be dealt with
What are ways of obtaining consent indirectly and avoiding deception?
What does an experiment allow for?
Allows us to establish a causal link between the IV and the DV. Following an experimental procedure we should be certain that the alteration we have made in the IV has caused the change in the DV.
What are common confounding variables?
Intelligence of participants Personality of participants Gender of participants Time of day Weather Noise levels Temperature
What are the advantages of laboratory experiments?
What are the disadvantages of laboratory experiments?
What are the advantages of a field experiment?
What are the disadvantages of field experiments?
What are natural experiments?
Experiments that take advantage of naturally occurring variables in a naturally occurring event
What are the advantages of natural experiments?
What are the disadvantages of natural experiments?
- Replication (rarely able to replicate, therefore hard to establish validity)
What are the advantages of the Repeated Measures design?
The participants are the same each time (no confounding variables, everything is kept constant because they are the same people
What are the disadvantages of the Repeated Measures design?