2.4.1 Ethics Flashcards
Why do we need to consider ethics in psychology research?
We study living beings with feelings and emotions you could cause them harm
Living beings are sentient beings, what does this mean?
They have feelings and emotions you could cause them harm
Where did modern psychologists concern for protection of participants come from?
Human experiments uncovered from Nuremberg trials following world war 2
In Britain who produce ethical guidelines for conducting research?
British psychological society
Why is it important bps guidelines are updated regularly?
Societies ethics and moral views change
What does confidentiality involve?
Any data participants provide should be kept private unless they give full consent to make it public
What does deception involve?
Lying, misleading or withholding information from participants
Should participants ever be deceived?
Not without strong scientific justification
Why are some participants deceived in research?
Studies would not achieve valid results due to demand characteristics of participants knew everything
participants should not experience what?
harm - physical, psychological
in what way might participants experience psychological harm?
stress, anxiety and humiliation
participants should leave psychological studies in…
…the same condition they arrived
the risk of harm should be….
…no more than what can reasonably expected in everyday life
there should not be a risk to the participant’s…
privacy, values, beliefs, relationships or status
what can observations be an invasion of?
privacy
what are researchers obliged to obtain?
participants full informed consent
what does full informed consent involve the participants knowing?
the aim of the research and their right to withdraw
when is consent an especially big issue?
when working with vulnerable individuals
who are vulnerable individuals?
those unable to give knowledgeable consent themselves, e.g.
children
those with disabilities
brain damage
give an example of a study with ethical issues:
being sane in insane places
blue eyes/brown eyes
bobo doll experiment
Stanford experiment
what was the aim of the being sane in insane places study?
to test the hypothesis that psychiatrists can not reliably tell the difference between sane and insane people
what sort of experiment was being sane in insane places?
field
what was the variables in the being insane places study?
IV - made up symptoms
DV - psychiatrists admission and diagnosis of patients
what did the procedure of the being sane in insane places involve?
sane people trying to gain admission to psychiatric wards claiming they were hearing voices
after admitted they stopped symptoms and attempted to get out by convincing staff they were sane