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Research Ethics and Integrity
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Research Methods – Conducting Socially Sensitive Research
In this course, Professor Nele Demeyere (University of Oxford) explores conducting socially sensitive research. In the first lecture, we think about research ethics and the moral responsibility of the researcher to ensure participant wellbeing. In the second lecture, we think about how research ethics guidelines came about and some specific modern guidelines which safeguard participants. In the third lecture, we think about research integrity and the wealth of considerations that must be made in each aspect of a study, to ensure high quality research is being conducted. Next, we think about the replication crisis and look at some key findings which have failed to replicate in recent research. In the fifth and final lecture, we think about some ethical implications that psychological research can have on individuals, groups, and society.
Research Ethics and Integrity
In this lecture, we think about research ethics, focusing in particular on: (i) what is meant by ethics in psychological research; (ii) how a researcher’s moral responsibility to their participants’ wellbeing can be defined as a list of considerations that must be made when undertaking research; (iii) the difference between research ethics and research integrity; (iv) understanding the potential implications of research considered to be socially sensitive.
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Demeyere, N. (2022, May 04). Research Methods – Conducting Socially Sensitive Research - Research Ethics and Integrity [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/courses/research-methods-conducting-socially-sensitive-research/the-replication-crisis
MLA style
Demeyere, N. "Research Methods – Conducting Socially Sensitive Research – Research Ethics and Integrity." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 04 May 2022, https://massolit.io/courses/research-methods-conducting-socially-sensitive-research/the-replication-crisis