Issues & debates AO3 Flashcards
1
Q
Gender bias
A
- Lack of females at senior research level, female concerns may not be reflected in questions asked.
- Lab exp disadvantage to women, psychologist (usually male) can label unreasonable, irrational and unable to complete complex tasks. Guilty on instituational sexism?
+ Can be prevented/minimised, criteria in place, diversity within women studied, not studied as object but actually participate, emphasis on collaborative research methods, qualitative data.
- Based on an essentialist perspective. Gender difference inevitable, ‘fixed’ in nature. 1930’s ‘scientific’ research- intellectual activity shrivel ovaries (disguised as biological ‘fact’), double-standard.
+ Changed since 1930’s, reflects time conducted in, gender bias less of an issue now.
2
Q
Culture bias
A
+ Less of an issue now. Used to be individualist/collectivist culture comparison. Less simplistic now.
+ Takana & Osaka. 14/15 studies comparing USA and Japan, no evidence of distinction between individualism and collectivism, culture bias less of an issue.
+ Not an issue as some can be universal. Ekman-basic facial expressions are the same for all human/animal world. Strange situation, imitation and interactional synchrony are universal.
- Conducting research in different cultures means less control of variables
- Now psychologists are more open minded so acknowledge differences in findings when doing cross culture study reducing bias
3
Q
Ethical implications
A
- Stopping socially sensitive research would leave only trivial questions to research, ignoring socially sensitive areas bad - Scarr says otherwise wouldn’t help underrepresented people.
- Some sensitive research is desirable, Finn et al - youth= reliable witness when questioned in a timely manner.
- In the US, sensitive research is likely to be rejected, Ceci found 2x more likely than non sensitive.