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The Need for Ethical Principles Psychologists must ask and answer questions such as: – Are we putting our participants at risk? – Is our experimental treatment.

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Presentation on theme: "The Need for Ethical Principles Psychologists must ask and answer questions such as: – Are we putting our participants at risk? – Is our experimental treatment."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Need for Ethical Principles Psychologists must ask and answer questions such as: – Are we putting our participants at risk? – Is our experimental treatment harmful? – Is the information we will gather from our experiment worth the potential risk and harm to participants that is involved?

2 The Need for Ethical Principles Four instances that created major concern regarding research ethics are cited in your text. These are: – The medical atrocities of World War II – The Tuskegee syphilis project – The Willowbrook hepatitis project – Stanley Milgram’s obedience studies of the 1960’s

3 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall The Need for Ethical Principles Many Nazis who committed medical research atrocities during World War II were prosecuted at the Nuremburg War Tribunal. The Nuremburg Code stressed consideration of the following ethical principles of research: – Participants should consent to participate in research. – Participants should be fully informed of the nature of the research project. – Risks should be avoided whenever possible. – Participants should be conducted by scientifically qualified personnel. – Participants have the right to discontinue participation at any time.

4 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Psychological Detective Which principles of the Nuremburg Code did the Tuskegee syphilis study violate? How did the study violate these principles?

5 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Experiments such as these have led to the development of ethical guidelines by the APA. The APA adopted and published the original code of ethics in 1973; it was revised in 1982, and again in 2002.

6 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Basic APA principles for research: – Securing “informed consent” from participants – Informing participants they have the freedom to withdraw at any time – Protection from harm – Debriefing after the research – Confidentiality

7 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Psychological Detective Why do you think these principles have proven to be controversial in conducting psychological research?

8 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans The Informed Consent Should: Give a general description of the project in which they are going to participate. Inform the participants that no penalties will be invoked if they choose not to participate. Clearly state that participants have the right to withdraw their participation at any time they desire.

9 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Is Deception in Research Necessary? – Providing a complete explanation or description of the project may influence the participants’ responses. – It is arguable that deception may be justified in some cases if our results are to be unbiased or uncontaminated by knowledge of the experiment and the expectancies that such knowledge may bring.

10 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Psychological Detective Even though it may not be readily apparent, the process of informed consent has given researchers a new variable to manipulate. What is this variable?

11 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Freedom to Withdraw – All human subjects have the right to end their participation in the research at any time for any reason.

12 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Researchers are to protect participants from harm – Participants should not be harmed during, or have long- lasting effects as a result of the research. – Researchers should be sure that their participants are protected from any physical or psychological harm. – If harm is a possibility during the experiment, it must be justified and cause no long-term harm.

13 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Participants at Risk and Participants at Minimal Risk – Participants at minimal risk: are participants who will experience no harmful effects through taking part in the research project.

14 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Vulnerable populations – Researchers need to consider factors such as: Health of participants Age of participants Ability of participants to understand what participation in a project may entail (e.g. children, patients with physical or mental disorders; persons with lower intelligence, low literacy, or English as a second language)

15 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans The Debriefing Session: – Is usually the final step in conducting the research project – Involves explaining to the participants the nature and purpose(s) of the project. – Participants may ask questions of the researcher and be provided with contact information should future questions come up.

16 APA Principles in the Conduct of Research with Humans Confidentiality : – All specific identifying information should be kept in strict confidence. – Results of the research should be published, but no information about the individual participants should be revealed.

17 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Psychological Detective Review the discussion of debriefing. What is the main goal of the debriefing session?

18 The Ethical Use of Animals in Psychological Research Here is a brief summary of the APA (1985) guidelines for the use of animals: – Justification of Research. the research should have a clear scientific purpose. – Personnel. Only trained personnel who are familiar with the animal-care guidelines should be involved with the research. All procedures must conform to appropriate federal guidelines. – Care and Housing of Animals. Animal housing areas must comply with current regulations. – Acquisition of Animals. If animals are not bred in the laboratory, they must be acquired in a lawful, humane manner. – Experimental Procedures. Humane consideration for the well-being of the animal should be incorporated into the design and conduct of all procedures involving animals, while keeping in mind the primary goal of experimental procedures – the acquisition of sound, replicable data. – Field Research. Field research must be approved by the appropriate review board. Investigators should take special precautions to disturb their research population(s) and the environment as little as possible. – Educational Use of Animals. The educational use of animals also must be approved by the appropriate review board. Instruction in the ethics of animal research is encouraged.

19 The Institutional Review Board The Institutional Review Board (IRB) is a campus review panel for the use of human participants in research projects. – At some institutions the IRB also reviews research projects that utilize animals. – Many institutions have an Animal Care and Use Committee that reviews research projects that utilize animals. A veterinarian must be a member of any panel that reviews animal research proposals. – The typical IRB is composed of a cross-section of individuals. IRB’s might contain faculty members from history, biology, education, psychology, and economics, as well as one or two members from the community who are not associated with the institution. The IRB serves to ensure that the experimenter treats research participants, whether they are humans or animals, according to the established ethical guidelines.

20 The Experimenter’s Responsibility The experimenter is the single individual who is ultimately accountable for the ethical conduct of the research project. – The researcher carefully weighs the benefits and costs of a project and then decides whether to conduct it.

21 The Participant’s Responsibility Korn (1988) indicated the research participant has the following responsibilities: – Be on time for the research appointment. – Participants have the responsibility to listen carefully to the experimenter and ask questions in order to understand the research. – Participants should take the research seriously and cooperate with the experimenter. – When the study has been completed, participants share the responsibility for understanding what happened. – Participants have the responsibility for honoring the researcher’s request that they not discuss the study with anyone else who might be a participant.

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23 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Researcher’s Ethical Obligations Once The Research is Completed Avoid Plagiarism – Do not plagiarize (use someone else’s work without giving credit to the original author) The Department of Psychology at Bishop’s University (1994) has suggested the following: – Any part of your paper that contains the exact words of an author must appear in quotation marks, with the author’s name, and the date of publication and page number(s) of the source attached. – You should not adapt material with only minor changes, such as combining sentences, omitting phrases, changing a few words, or inverting sentence order. – If what you have to say is substantially your own words, but you took the facts or ideas from a particular author, then omit the quotation marks and reference with a parenthetical citation such as (Jones, 1949). – Always acknowledge secondary sources. – You must reference every statement of fact and every idea or opinion not your own unless the item is part of common knowledge. – Do not hand in for credit a paper that is the same or similar to one you have handed in elsewhere.

24 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Researcher’s Ethical Obligations Once The Research is Completed Avoid Fabrication of Data – Refers to situations where the experimenter either deliberately changes or alters data or makes up data to suit his or her needs. – Some researchers feel a pressure to publish and thus will fabricate data to support their hypotheses.

25 Smith/Davis (c) 2005 Prentice Hall Researcher’s Ethical Obligations Once The Research is Completed Avoid Lying with Statistics – Results should be presented in an unbiased manner. Cite Your References Correctly – It is the researcher’s responsibility to cite and list only those articles that have been read. The least you should do is cite the secondary source you are using. – It is allowable to cite an article that is described and referenced in another article. If Smith and Davis (1999) described and referenced a research project conducted by Brown (1984), you can cite it as follows: – Brown (as cited in Smith & Davis, 1999) found that…… In your reference section you would list only the Smith and Davis reference (the one you actually read).


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