Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Review the two classic psychology studies (Milgram’s Obedience to Authority and Zimbardo’s Stamford Prison Experiment) under Readings and Resources.? Using evidence from Chapter 3 - Essayabode

Review the two classic psychology studies (Milgram’s Obedience to Authority and Zimbardo’s Stamford Prison Experiment) under Readings and Resources.? Using evidence from Chapter 3

 Review the two classic psychology studies (Milgram’s Obedience to Authority and Zimbardo’s Stamford Prison Experiment) under Readings and Resources.  Using evidence from Chapter 3 of your textbook, as well as the American Psychological Association’s Ethical Principles and Code of Conduct, discuss two (2) ways in which research ethics were violated in one (1) of these studies.  Then, discuss two (2) ways you would make the study more ethically sound if you were to rerun the study today.  With your ethical considerations in place, do you think you would learn as much about obedience as Milgram did in his original research or as much as Zimbardo did about the power of social roles?  Why or why not?  Finally, do you think it was ethical that Milgram or Zimbardo only studied white males?  How might their study results have differed if their sample was more culturally diverse? 

Research Methods in Psychology

Ethical Issues in the Conduct of Psychological Research

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1

Ethical Standards

APA Ethics Code

Applies to all psychologists (including psychology students)

Ethical standards for

Research

Therapy

Teaching

Administration

Solve ethical dilemmas

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2

Evaluate Ethics Before Conducting Research

Institutional Review Board (IRB)

Protect rights and welfare of human participants

Committee members

Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)

Protects rights and welfare of animal subjects

Committee members

Care and housing of animals

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3

Risk/Benefit Ratio

Subjective evaluation

Costs and benefits of a research project

Participants

Society

The researcher and institution

Questions

Is the research worth it?

Are the benefits greater than the risks?

Will the study produce valid and interpretable results?

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4

Risks

Different types

Physical injury

Psychological injury (mental or emotional stress)

Social injury (e.g., embarrassment)

Ethical obligation

Protect participants from all risk

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5

Minimal Risk

Definition:

Harm or discomfort is not greater than that experienced in daily life or during routine physical or psychological tests.

Minimal risk differs across individuals.

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6

“At Risk”

When risk is greater than minimal

= “at risk”

Increases researchers’ ethical obligation to protect participants’ welfare

Consider alternative methods with lower risk

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7

Confidentiality

Social risk

“confidential” ≠ “anonymous”

To increase confidentiality

Remove identifying information

Report results in terms of statistical averages

Internet research

Confidentiality is a special problem

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8

Is Risk Present?

Consider whether participants are at risk in the following situations.

College students complete an adjective checklist to describe their current mood. The researcher seeks to identify depressed students so they can be included in a study that examines cognitive deficits associated with depression.

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9

Is Risk Present?

A psychologist administers a battery of achievement tests to elderly adults in the dayroom of a nursing facility. The psychologist seeks to determine if there is a decline in mental functioning with advancing age.

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10

Is Risk Present?

Students in a psychology research methods class see another student enter their classroom in the middle of the class period, speak loudly and angrily with the instructor, and then leave. As part of a study on eyewitness behavior, the students are then asked to describe the intruder.

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11

Is Risk Present?

A researcher recruits students from introductory psychology classes to participate in a study of the effects of alcohol on cognitive functioning. The experiment requires that some students drink 2 ounces of alcohol (mixed with orange juice) before performing a computer game.

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12

Informed Consent

A social contract

Make clear to participants:

Nature of the research (what they will do)

Possible risks

Written informed consent

Required when risk is greater than minimal

Not required when researchers observe public behavior

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13

Informed Consent, continued

Informed consent requires

Inform participants of all aspects of research that may influence their decision to participate

Allow to withdraw at any time without penalty

No pressure

Some are unable to provide legal consent

Young children, mentally impaired

provide assent to participate

Obtain legal guardians’ consent

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14

Is Informed Consent Necessary?

Consider whether informed consent is necessary in these situations.

In a study of the drinking behavior of college students, an undergraduate working for a faculty member attends a fraternity party and records the amount of alcohol consumed by students at the party.

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15

Is Informed Consent Necessary?

As part of a study of the gay community, a gay researcher joins a gay baseball team with the goal of recording behaviors of the participants in the context of team competition during the season. All the games are played outdoors and may be watched by the public.

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16

Is Informed Consent Necessary?

Public bathroom behavior (e.g., flushing, hand washing, littering, graffiti writing) of men and women is observed by male and female researchers concealed in the stalls of the respective washrooms.

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17

Is Informed Consent Necessary?

A graduate student investigates cheating behaviors of college students by concealing himself in a projection booth in an auditorium during an exam. From this vantage point he can see with the aid of binoculars the movements of most students. He records head movements, switching papers, passing notes, use of cell phones, texting, and other suspicious exam behaviors.

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18

Privacy

Definition

The right of individuals to decide how information about them is communicated to others

Research participants want to know

How their information is protected

How their confidentiality will be protected

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19

Privacy, continued

Public or private behavior?

Three dimensions

Sensitivity of the information

Setting

Method of dissemination of the information

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20

Deception

Occurs when

Information is withheld from participants

Participants are intentionally misinformed about aspects of the research

Deception for the purpose of getting people to participate is always unethical.

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21

Pros and Cons of Deception

Pros: Why deceive?

Allows study of people’s natural behavior

Opportunity to investigate behavior and mental processes not easily studied without deception

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22

Pros and Cons of Deception, continued

Cons: Why should we not deceive?

Contradicts principle of informed consent

Relationship between researcher and participant is not open and honest

Frequent deception makes people suspicious about research and psychology

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23

Deception, continued

Deception is justified only when

The study is very important

No other methods are available

Deception would not influence decision to participate

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24

Deception, continued

When deception is used, the researcher must debrief

Inform participants of the reason for deception

Discuss any misconceptions

Remove any harmful effects

Goal: Participants should feel good about the research experience.

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25

Research with Animals

Should animals be used in research?

APA Ethical Standards and IACUCs

Researchers are ethically obligated to protect welfare of animal subjects

Justify any pain, discomfort, death by potential scientific, educational, or applied goals

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26

Reporting Psychological Research

Publication Credit

Acknowledge fairly those who contributed to a research project

Authorship based on scholarly importance of contributions

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27

Reporting Psychological Research, continued

Plagiarism

Don’t present substantial portions or elements of another’s work as your own.

“Substantial portion or element” can be 1-2 words if it represents a key idea

Ignorance or sloppiness are not legitimate excuses

Cite sources appropriately

Cut-and-paste from Internet is plagiarism.

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28

Plagiarism, continued

Example of a Correctly Cited Direct Quote

“Informed by developments in case law, the police use various methods of interrogation—including the presentation of false evidence (e.g., fake polygraph, fingerprints, or other forensic test results; staged eyewitness identifications), appeals to God and religion, feigned friendship, and the use of prison informants” (Kassin & Kiechel, 1996, p. 125).

Kassin, S. M., & Kiechel, K. L. (1996). The social psychology of false confessions: Compliance, internalization, and confabulation. Psychological Science, 7, 125-128.

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29

Plagiarism, continued

Example of Plagiarism (No citation accompanying paraphrased material)

Research investigations of deceptive interrogation methods to extract confessions are important because police use false evidence (e.g., fake test results) and false witnesses when interrogating suspects. Interrogators also pressure suspects by pretending to be their friends.

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30

Plagiarism, continued

Example of Paraphrased Material with Correct Citation

Research investigations of deceptive interrogation methods to extract confessions are important because police use false evidence (e.g., fake test results) and false witnesses when interrogating suspects (Kassin & Kiechel, 1996). In addition, Kassin and Kiechel state that interrogators pressure suspects by pretending to be their friends.

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31

Thinking Critically about Ethical Issues

How do we decide whether a proposed study is ethical?

What if people disagree? (they will)

Is there a right answer? (often, no)

The best we can do is follow steps for making ethical decisions.

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32

Steps for Ethical Decision Making

Find out the facts.

Procedure, participants, etc.

Identify the relevant ethical issues.

Risk, informed consent, privacy, confidentiality, deception, debriefing

Decide what is at stake for all parties.

Participants, researchers, institutions, society

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33

Steps for Ethical Decision Making, continued

Identify alternative methods, procedures

Consider ethical implications for each alternative, including not doing the proposed research

Decide on the action to be taken

Approve research

Conditional approval with modifications

Do not approve research

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34

Ethical Compliance

Ethical Compliance Checklist

Goal: ensure ethical compliance throughout the research process

Required for research submitted to APA journals

www.apa.org/journals

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