00:01
Question, professor maugh wants to design a project studying emotional response to date rape.
00:04
He advertises participants in the school newspaper, informs him about the nature of the study, gets their consent, conducts an interview, and debriefs him about the results when the experiment is over.
00:13
If you were on the irb, which is a psychological association, the institutional review board, that basically looks at the ethical considerations of human participant studies and make sure they're up to par and there's no big ethical concerns there.
00:28
Which ethical consideration would you most likely have, would you most likely have the most concern about in professor moss study? so, basically, we're just looking at, oh, sorry about that, ethical concerns.
00:47
Okay.
00:48
So let's look at a, first of all.
00:52
A is coercion.
00:53
That's where you're getting responses, participant responses, by threatening people, or really just putting people in an uncomfortable position so you can get their responses.
01:04
The way he's getting responses, it's described as advertising.
01:09
So there's no ethical issues there.
01:11
He's just putting it forth, and it's a completely voluntary response that you're getting.
01:15
So there's no issue with coercion there.
01:17
Sorry about that.
01:19
Then we look at b.
01:22
B is deception.
01:25
Deception is being, it's lying about the purposes of study.
01:30
It's being unclear about what you intend to study and getting different results than what you're saying you're trying to get...