Chapter 4 Research Ethics Flashcards

1
Q

3 unethical choices in the Tuskegee example

A

participants were not treated respectfully, they were harmed and they were a targeted disadvantaged group

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2
Q

major unethical component of the Milgram obedience study

A

participants werent told that the “learner” was actually a research assistant faking screams and werent really receiving shocks

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3
Q

3 research ethics granting councils in Canada

A
  1. SSHRC: social sciences and humanities research council
  2. NSERC: natural sciences and engineering research council
  3. CIHR: canadian institute of health research
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4
Q

what is the tri council policy statement 2?

A

policy promoting the ethical treatment of people in research and providing the guidelines canadian researchers must follow when conducting research w human participants

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5
Q

3 core principles of TCPS2

A

respect for persons
concern for welfare
justice

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6
Q

foundation of TCPS2

A

value of respect for human dignity

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7
Q

main focus of respect for persons in research

A

respecting their right to choose and consent to participation, and protecting those who are vulnerable to being coerced

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8
Q

main focus of concern for welfare in research

A

the benefits should outweigh the risks and participants should not be exposed to avoidable and unnecessary risks

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9
Q

3 types of risks to participants

A

psychological, physiological and social

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10
Q

main focus of justice in research

A

treating people with fairness and equity (considering the balance between those who participate in the research and those who benefit from it)

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11
Q

is monetary rewards cohersion?

A

as long as it’s not a generally hard amount for humans to resist, no

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12
Q

how can researchers decide how much $$ to pay participants?

A

there are guidelines for payment based on # of questions

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13
Q

key balance when providing info to receive informed consent

A

reveal info that might affect the decision to participate, but try to withhold key info

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14
Q

why is it important to withold key info when obtaining informed consent?

A

to minimize reactivity and expectant effects of participants

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15
Q

when does informed consent need to be obtained?

A

BEFORE study

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16
Q

deception and its 2 types

A

not fully revealing the purposes of a study; active (commission) and passive (omission)

17
Q

commission vs omission

A

commission: misleading participants to believe something you presented to them
omission: things administered to participants that we didnt tell them up front that we’re measuring

18
Q

another word for omission

A

concealment

19
Q

do the TCPS and APA make allowances for deception?

A

yes

20
Q

one advantage of deception

A

reduces reactivity

21
Q

debriefing

A

explaining the purposes/procedures of a study and undoing any harm (all at the end of a study)

22
Q

when is debriefing especially important and why?

A

for deception; it alleviates its potential impact

23
Q

when is debriefing required?

A

always

24
Q

anonymity

A

participants cannot be identified by researchers

25
Q

confidentiality

A

participants identity/personal info is not revealed to the public/in the reported study

26
Q

in what way should data always try to be collected?

A

anonymously; do confidentially if anonymity impossible

27
Q

what types of research require REB review (2)?

A

research involving living human participants and research involving human remains

28
Q

what types of research MAY not require REB review (4)?

A

research based on publicly available info, strictly obs. in a public setting, based on secondary use of anon data, or program evals/quality assurance

29
Q

data fabrication vs falsification

A

fabrication: inventing data that fits the hypothesis
falsification: influencing a study’s results

30
Q

plagiarism

A

representing the ideas or words of others as one’s own

31
Q

importance of replication (2)

A

fabricated results won’t replicate
public verification

32
Q

the best practices have which 3 characteristics?

A

transparency
reproducibility
replicability

33
Q

reproducibility vs replicability

A

reproducibility: reproducing identical results from the same data
replicability: replicating results generated from older data by collecting new data using similar procedures

34
Q

who oversees the ethical use of animals in Canada?

A

Canadian Council of Animal Care

35
Q

what is the ACC (research ch4)

A

Animal Care Committee: institutional panel that oversees all aspects of animal care and use

36
Q

3 Rs of research with animals

A

replacement: avoid or replace the use of animals
reduction: minimize the number of animals used per experiment
refinement: minimize the pain, suffering or last harm that may be experienced by research animals