Ethics- RESEARCH METHODS Flashcards
RESEARCH METHODS
Ethical issues
- Conflict of dilemma exists between participants’ rights and researchers’ studies.
- Goals of the research to produce authentic, valid + worthwhile data
Informed consent
Making participants aware of the aims of the research, the procedures, their rights, what their data will be used for
Deception
Deliberately misleading or withholding information from participants at any stage of the investigation
Protection from harm
Participants should not be placed at any more risk than they would be in their daily lives and should be protected from physical + psychological harm
Privacy
Participants have right to control information about themselves
Confidentiality
Having any personal data protected
Dealing with informed consent
- Participants should be issued with a consent letter/ form detailing relevant information that might affect their decision to participate.
- Children under 16 need parental consent
Dealing with deception and protection from harm
- At the end of the study, participants should be given a full debrief and should be made aware of the true aims of the investigation.
- Participants have the right to withhold data and require counselling if participants have been subject to stress or embarrassment
Dealing with confidentiality
If personal details are held these must be protected.
BPS code of ethics
- Quasi legal document produced by the British Psychology Society (BPS) that instructs Psychologists about what behaviour is and is not acceptable when dealing with participants.
- Code is built around 4 major principles: RESPECT, COMPETENCE, RESPONSIBILITY, INTEGRITY
Presumptive consent
- Rather than getting consent from the participant themselves, a similar group of people are asked if the study is acceptable.
- If the group agrees then the consent of the original participants is presumed.
Prior general consent
- Participants give their permission to take part in a number of different studies- one will involve deception.
- By consenting participants are effectively consenting to be deceived
Retrospective consent
- Participants are asked for their consent (during debriefing) having already been apart of the study.
- They may not have been aware of their participation or they may have been subject to deception.