Title: Ethics in Experimental Research
1Ethics in Experimental Research
- Showing concern for the welfare of human subjects
2Horror Stories
- Tuskegee syphilis study of 1932
- Stanley Milgrams conformity research of 1963
- commercially funded, for profit research
(2001) conflicts of interest and the file
drawer problem - Pharmaceutical manufacturers outsourcing drug
trials to poor countries with lax standards
(2004) - U.S. energy Dept. and radiation tests on
civilians (1970s) - LSD and the CIAs MK Ultra program (1973)
3Radioactive oatmeal!
- More than 100 boys living in an orphanage were
fed Quaker Oats with radioactive iron and calcium
in the 1950's. - The diet was part of an experiment to prove that
the nutrients in Quaker oatmeal travel throughout
the body. - A class action settlement for 1.85 million was
reached in 1998
4The atomic veterans
- During and after WWII, American soldiers were
forced to observe nuclear blasts within 50 miles
of ground zero. - Thousands of these soldiers later died of
leukemia and other rare forms of cancer. - Their families were barred from suing the federal
government
5Wendell Johnsons diagnosogenic theory of
stuttering
- The Monster Study
- In 1938, Wendell Johnson and Mary Tudor trained
orphans to be more conscious of small speech
errors. - Johnsons theory was that punishing fluency
errors made them worse. - All five stutterers in the test group showed
increased stuttering five out of six of the
normal children exhibited worse fluency. - The experiment, referred to by some as the
Monster Experiment turned some of the children
into lifelong stutterers despite later efforts to
reverse the damage.
6Cloning Fraud
- 2005 South Korean researcher, Woo Suk Hwang,
fabricated evidence that he had successfully
cloned human embryos. - The journal Science, retracted two studies he had
published.
7Outsourcing clinical trials
- The price of bringing a new drug to market is
about 1 million per day - Much of that cost is devoted to human clinical
trials - western drug makers are outsourcing safety and
efficacy studies to developing countries, a large
proportion of them to India and Russia. - There are currently some 400 clinical trials
underway in India
8Ethical matrix for social science research
Good ends Bad ends
Good means Ethical research Subjective ethic (backfires)
Bad means Machiavellian research Unethical research
9Belmont report
- Autonomy
- Free-choice, no pressure to participate,
- consideration of at risk groups or individuals
persons with diminished autonomy - Beneficence
- do no harm, ensure the well-being of
participants - Justice
- fair distribution of risks and benefits of
research - subject recruitment, selection
- subject compensation
10How common is research misconduct?
- More than 1 percent of scientists report direct
knowledge of an instance of misconduct. Elliot
(2000). How prevalent is fraud? Thats a
multi-million dollar question. Science, 290, pp.
1662-1663 - Motivations include
- tenure and promotion
- pressure to publish or perish
- lucrative grants, patents
- fame, notoriety, prestige
11Fraud in scientific research
- Intentional fraud
- Cyril Burts research on monozygotic
twinsfudging the results of IQ tests - William Summerlins cancer researchfaked results
of tumor shrinkage
- Unintentional fraud
- Weitzmans research on women's and men's incomes
following divorceblamed computer error for
erroneous results - Pons and Fleischmann's research on cold
fusioncouldnt be replicated by other researchers
12No harm to the participants
- minimizing psychological risks
- Example simulations that accentuate racist,
sexist, or homophobic attitudes - minimizing physical risks
- Example behavioral psychologists penchant for
shocking subjects in the 60s and 70s - showing concern for the welfare of participants
- Example Stanley Milgrams conformity research
13Voluntary informed consent
- Before conducting any research using human
participants, a participants voluntary informed
consent must first be obtained - Voluntary the subject willingly agrees to
participate in the study, and is free to withdraw
at any time without penalty - Informed the subject is aware of any risks
(physical or psychological) associated with
participating - Consent the subjects consent is unambiguous,
e.g., a signed permission form (no such things as
implied consent)
14Exceptions to the consent requirement
- Low-risk anonymous survey
- Observations gathered in public places
- Information in the public domain
-
15Failure to obtain informed consent
- Kinchs study on the Pygmalion effect
- Problems associated with using freshman in
experimental research - Can students under 18 legally give their consent?
- Should participation in experiments be a course
requirement? - Ethics of participant-observation
- Going under cover to study groups may violate
their rate to privacy
16Deception and the use of cover stories
- Elms (1982) recommends the following strictures
for the use of deception in experimental
research - As a last resort When there is no other feasible
way to obtain the desired information - example studies on student cheating
- When the benefits substantially outweigh the
risks - example controlled double-blind studies on drug
efficacy - When subjects are given the option to withdraw at
any time, without penalty - When any physical or psychological harm is
temporary - When subjects are debriefed and the research
procedures are made available for public review
17Privacy concerns
- Humphreys (1970) tea room trade research
- Personnel actionfailure to ensure anonymity
- Incest casefailure to remove identifying
information
- Anonymity no one including the experimenter can
match the data to specific individuals - Confidentiality the experimenter knows
participants identities but takes steps to
protect participants privacy.
18Standards governing social science research
- at the department level
- Human Subjects Committees
- at the university level
- Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)
- professional associations
- American Psychological Associations Ethical
Guidelines - Code of Ethics of the American Speech Hearing
and Language Association
19Debriefing participants
- Dehoaxing
- undoing the cover story and revealing the true
purpose of the investigation - Desensitizing
- addressing any lingering psychological or
emotional concerns associated with participating
in the investigation - Explaining the benefits of participation to
subjects - Thanking subjects and providing for future
contact if necessary
20Treating participants with respect and dignity
- the subjects versus participants controversy
- avoiding isms in research sexism, racism,
ethnocentrism, ageism, etc. - ethics of withholding treatment from control
groups