Issues and Debates Flashcards
What are ethical issues?
Bringing system of morality and principles into conflict
What is social sensitivity?
Sieber and Stanley (1988) defined it as potential consequences for the group/people represened by research
What were some theories or approaches that were unethical?
Milgram- lack of right to withdraw comfortably
Zimbardo- distress, harm, stopped early
What were some theories or approaches that were also unethical in relation to attachment?
Bowlby’s monotropy- argues womens role should be the primary caregiver an discourages fathers to be caregivers
What were some theories or approaches that were socially sensitive?
Raine et al (1997) scanned violent criminals to look at impulse control, implying children should have brain scans to see offending behaviour
How should researchers consider ethical implications?
- Research Question- mis-interpretation
- Methodology- treatment, protection, rights
3.Institutional contexts- data usage, funding? - Interpretation/Application- reactions of media
Who could be affected by ethics and ethical implications?
-Participants
-Researchers
-Funders
-Company
-Public
What is the main example of a socially sensitive piece of research?
History of intelligence testing by Colonel Yerkes who assigned roles via native intellectual ability. Black people were perceived to have a lower intelligence than the rest of the population. (Mental age of 10.41 in comparison to 13). This led to discriminatory policies such as the Immigration Restriction Act of 1924 but the IQ tests were unreliable and inaccurate.
What are some examples of ethical implications in areas of psychology?
SLT- self-fulfilling prophecies of aggression
Biological- if something has a biological cause, it cannot be changed
Pyschodynamic- Odiepus and Elektra complex is seen to be sensitive
What ways could ethical issues be dealt with?
-Submit proposal to BPS and abide by recommendations
-Cost benefit analysis
-Avoid prejudice through misleading title an presentation of findings
-Reflexivity- examine own biases which affect personal influence, promoting accountability and transparency
What is gender bias?
The differential treatment and/or representations of males and females based on sterotypes
What is alpha bias?
Research that exaggerates the difference between males and females
What is beta bias?
Research that ignores difference between males and females
What is androcentrism?
Theories centred around males
What is universality?
A theory that could be applied to all people no matter the gender or culture
What are some examples of alpha bias in psychology?
-Psychodynamic- implies connection between boys and fathers is stronger than girls and mothers. He argued superiority and a stronger superego for boys without evidence
-Evolutionary explanations for attachment like men being more dominant and women being more nurturing or empathetic to their children
What are some examples of beta bias in psychology?
-Social Influence- Asch only used male participants and generalised the findings to all
-Mori and Arai (2010) showed gender differences in conformity levels
How can research not have gender bias?
-Equal amount of participants for each gender, use all genders
-Use a stratified sampling for a more representative sample
-Random Allocation for sampling, not gender specific
-Not WEIRD (Western, educated, intelligent, rich and democratic)
-Make sure that if it is gender specific, use non generalised terms
What are other examples of alpha and beta bias in studies and approaches?
Alpha bias- Biological like gender differences in hormones
Freud- reinforced male dominance and female inferiority
-Bandura as boys showed more aggression than girls
-Role of the father
Beta bias- Biopsych as research into fight/flight mode assumed only male samples are needed as it is generalisable
What are practical applications of gender bias?
Beta- minimises difference but can lead to equal treatment within work and education. However, Hare-Mustin and Marcek argued equality is not always a benefit such as physical demands in pregnancy.
What did Cornwell’s 2013 study show?
Cornwell (2013) noted females are better at learning than males which increases positive attributes of women, reducing stereotypes and making work more inclusive
What is the feminist approach?
Attempts to restore the imbalance in pyschological research and theory as Eagly (1978) claims females are less effective leaders but it is purposeful in putting training programmes in place to allow growth in female leaders
Why is gender bias socially sensitive?
Gender bias forms rigid stereotypes creating widespread beliefs like gender roles in family an women seen as primary caregivers. This could impact the economy as women reduce their intelligence or chance of education by being viewed as maternally worthy
What did Rosenthal’s study show?
Male experimenters were nicer to female participants than male participants. Methodologies and validity are an issue as feminists argue the experiments reduce validity and women due to their controlled nature