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Participants in Psychological Research
In psychological research, participants are the individuals being studied. They are actively involved in the research process rather than being passive subjects. Participants constitute a primary stakeholder group whose ethical treatment and well-being must be rigorously evaluated during the design and execution of scientific studies.
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Educational Psychology
Psychology
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Clinical Practice of Psychology
KPU
Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook
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Scientific Community
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Psychological Research Participant
Participants in Psychological Research
According to the ethical framework for evaluating a scientific research project, which three primary groups must be considered when assessing the study's impact?
Match each group affected by psychological research with the primary ethical concern a researcher must address for that stakeholder.
A researcher conducts a study on a new memory-enhancement technique and treats all student participants ethically. If the researcher later intentionally misrepresents the study's limitations in a report to the scientific community, they have committed an ethical violation even though the participants themselves were unharmed.
Evaluating the ethical scope of a research project involves identifying the scale of impact across various tiers of stakeholders. Arrange the three groups considered in a standard ethical framework in order of the breadth of the researcher's accountability, starting with the group requiring the most direct and localized oversight and ending with the group representing the most general and distal impact.
A psychologist is planning a high-stakes experimental study on the impact of sleep deprivation on high-pressure decision-making. To ensure the research design addresses all three primary groups affected by scientific research, which of the following synthesized protocols should the researcher implement?
A thorough ethical evaluation of a scientific research project is limited to assessing the impact on the individuals who participate in the study.
A researcher treats participants with respect and debriefs them properly, fulfilling all ethical obligations toward research participants. However, in the final manuscript, the researcher omits several 'outlier' data points solely because they weakened the statistical significance of the results. This selective misreporting primarily violates the researcher's ethical responsibilities to the _____.
To fully understand the ethical scope of a study, a researcher must evaluate how it affects the specific individuals being tested, the scientific community, and _____ as a whole.
A research group is reviewing an ethical checklist for a new clinical trial. Match each specific ethical concern or action with the primary stakeholder group it is designed to address, based on the three-group ethical framework.
An ethical review board is evaluating a researcher's proposal. To satisfy the ethical framework systematically, the researcher must plan and address ethical concerns in a logical progression from immediate study design to broad public dissemination. Order the following actions from the earliest stage (designing study procedures) to the latest stage (public impact).
According to the moral foundations of ethical research, a thorough ethical evaluation of a scientific research project must assess its impact across different stakeholders. Identify and briefly describe the three primary groups of stakeholders that are evaluated under this ethical framework.
Based on Dr. Miller's research plan, explain how her planned actions address the ethical obligations owed to each of the three primary stakeholder groups in scientific research.
A social psychologist conducts an ethical study on cooperation using college student participants. However, when writing the journal manuscript, the researcher fabricates a portion of the statistical results to make the effect seem stronger. Apply the ethical framework to identify which specific stakeholder group is directly violated by this fabrication, and explain how this action impacts that group.
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In psychological research, the individuals being studied are considered passive subjects rather than active participants.
In the context of modern psychological research methods, which statement best explains why the individuals being studied are referred to as 'participants' rather than 'subjects'?
A psychologist is conducting a study on how social pressure influences decision-making. To ensure the individuals involved are treated as active participants and primary stakeholders, arrange the following steps in the correct chronological order, from the initial planning stage through the completion of the study.
In modern psychological research, the shift from viewing individuals as 'subjects' to 'participants' involves several distinct ethical and methodological dimensions. Match each research action below to the specific component of the 'participant' role it is designed to address.
You are constructing a new 'Participant Empowerment Protocol' for a psychology study on workplace stress. To ensure the individuals involved are treated as active participants and primary stakeholders, rather than passive subjects, which of the following original research designs should you create?
In psychological research, referring to the individuals being studied as 'participants' rather than 'subjects' is merely a stylistic or linguistic choice that carries no substantive implications for how their ethical treatment and well-being are evaluated.
In psychological research, the individuals being studied are referred to as _____, a term that emphasizes their active involvement rather than viewing them as passive subjects.
In the ethical evaluation of a research protocol, a researcher who treats the individuals being studied as passive 'subjects' is criticized for failing to recognize them as _____, a status that acknowledges their role as active stakeholders in the scientific process.
Analyze the role of individuals under study by matching each concept from the research methods definition to its corresponding description of engagement or ethical status.
Evaluate the research workflow for safeguarding participants. Order the steps a researcher must take to assess and manage the ethical treatment of participants from the initial planning stages through to the study's completion, based on their status as active participants and primary stakeholders.
Define the term "participants" in the context of psychological research and recall their specific role and ethical status as outlined in research methodology.
Based on the definition of research participants, explain why Dr. Aris's characterization of the people in his study is flawed and describe how he should adjust his understanding of their role.
An institutional review board is examining a psychologist's new study protocol. To treat the individuals involved as a primary stakeholder group, what two critical aspects of the participants' experience must the researchers and the board rigorously evaluate?