Ethical Issues 0.0 / 5 ? PsychologyCore studiesResearch methods and techniquesASAQA Created by: Betsy_2018Created on: 15-01-17 13:23 What does debriefing attempt to do? Attempt to undo negative effects, disclose deceptions and reassure the participant of confidentiality. 1 of 12 What must participants leave in? The same mental condition as they entered in 2 of 12 What is the problem with informed consent? It makes the experiment less natural 3 of 12 What are the 4 types of informed consent? Presumptive, prior general, retrospective, parental 4 of 12 What right do participants have? Right to withdraw, right over their data 5 of 12 If someone is under age, what will they need? Parental consent 6 of 12 What protects participants' data? Data Protection Act 7 of 12 How are participants referenced when findings are published? Numbers or letters 8 of 12 What are the cons of deception? No informed consent, misleading/withholding information 9 of 12 How can deception be justified? If the benefits are great, not harm comes to the participant and debriefing/counselling is offered 10 of 12 How are participants protected from harm? No physical/psychology harm comes to the participant, not placed in any more risk than normal life, debriefed, counselling 11 of 12 What are the BPS? British Psychological Society; they set up guidelines (code of ethics); use a cost-benefit approach 12 of 12
Outline ways in which psychologists have dealt with ethical issues in their research and consider whether these have been successful. (12 marks) 5.0 / 5 based on 2 ratings
Comments
No comments have yet been made