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Question #7 What Kinds of Research Are Considered Unethical, and What Are Some Examples of Serious Ethical Lapses in Social and Behavioral Sciences Research?

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On a broad level, researchers may be criticized, and their research may even be considered unethical if

 the research plan/protocol is not approved by an institutional review board (IRB) prior to beginning the research;

 guidelines for obtaining informed consent are not followed appropriately;

 people are included in research without their prior consent or knowledge, when consent is required;

 researchers lie to participants (except in IRB-approved research that involves legitimate deception and appropriate debriefing processes);

 individuals are coerced into participating in research against their will;

 researchers target individuals who may find it difficult to refuse participation due to personal circumstances;

 participants are exposed to unreasonable or unnecessary risks;

 researchers do not follow their IRB-approved protocol; or

 researchers make up or manipulate research data in order to suggest promising results.

Research may still be considered unethical even if the researcher’s actions do not result in clear evidence of harm or there did not appear to be any intentional wrongdoing. It is also important to realize that participants may be unintentionally harmed, even if policies and procedures are followed completely and research is conducted ethically.

The development of federal research regulations and of codes of ethics for professional societies in the social and behavioral sciences has been heavily influenced by several famous examples of serious ethical lapses that occurred before regulations existed. These are described below.

The Milgram Obedience Study. In the early 1960s, Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram recruited people to participate in a study that was supposedly about learning. Participants were asked to administer test questions to an individual located in another room, whom they met prior to starting. If a question was answered incorrectly, the participant was told to administer a shock to the individual. The voltage of the shock increased with each incorrect answer. As the shocks increased, the individual in the other room receiving the shocks would scream and ask the participant to stop. However, the researcher, who was in the room with the participant, would simply tell them to continue and to finish asking the remaining questions. What the participants did not know was that the individual in the other room was not another participant but rather a confederate: that is, someone hired by the researcher to pretend to be in pain. What Milgram was really testing was whether and to what extent the participants would continue to obey the researcher, even when they heard pleas to stop. Some participants stopped after hearing their victim’s protests; but most continued, demonstrating the potential strength of obedient tendencies. Milgram’s study contributed greatly to our understanding of human psychology. However, these experiments upset some participants and have been criticized by the scientific community as psychologically harmful as well as uncomfortable, manipulative, and embarrassing. Even worse, Milgram failed to adequately debrief study participants; he did not explain the reasons for the deception and addressing their emotional distress.

The “Tearoom Trade” Study. In the mid-1960s, Laud Humphreys, a graduate student in sociology at Washington University in St. Louis, concealed his identity as a researcher and served as a lookout for male strangers having sex in public restrooms—a phenomenon referred to at the time as the “tearoom trade.” By volunteering to act as a lookout, a common practice, Humphreys was able to observe men leaving the scene and getting into their cars; he would then write down their license plate numbers in order to learn their names and home addresses. He later visited some of the men at their homes, where he gathered additional demographic information about them and their families by pretending to be conducting a health department survey. Some praise Humphreys’s work, published in 1975, which provided data to dispel the prevailing stereotype of homosexuals as deviants. Most of the men Humphreys followed were otherwise average members of society and, in some cases, upstanding community role models. Although there is no evidence that anyone was directly harmed or outed by the study, many sociologists have criticized Humphreys’s behavior as an extreme invasion of privacy.

The Stanford Prison Study. In the early 1970s, psychologist Philip Zimbardo recruited students at Stanford University to participate in a study exploring the reasons for conflict between military guards and prisoners. Participants were assigned roles as either guards or prisoners and were placed in a simulated prison environment intended to last all day and night for two weeks. After several days, numerous participants—both guards and prisoners—expressed a desire to stop because they became so upset by the role-playing. Initially, Zimbardo would not allow the participants to leave the simulated prison environment, which was a clear violation of the principle of respect for persons. Eventually, the research was stopped after six days.

Unfortunately, ethical lapses and controversies in research are not just a historical problem. They continue to happen. Several examples of more recent controversial social and behavioral sciences studies are included in the References and Resources section for Part 1. For example, concerns have arisen about researchers’ knowledge of and even participation in illegal activities (Goffman, 2014) as well as exploitation of study participants (Good, 1991).

More questions? See #21, #48, and #61.

100 Questions (and Answers) About Research Ethics

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