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State the definition of 'minimal risk' in psychological research as described in the ethical guidelines, and identify what level of anticipated benefit is required to ethically justify a study that meets this classification.

Question: State the definition of 'minimal risk' in psychological research as described in the ethical guidelines, and identify what level of anticipated benefit is required to ethically justify a study that meets this classification.

Sample answer: Minimal risk means that the potential harm in a study is no greater than what is encountered in daily life or during routine physical and psychological examinations. If a study poses only minimal risk, even a small anticipated benefit to the participants, science, or society is generally considered sufficient to ethically justify the research.

Key points:

  • Define minimal risk as potential harm no greater than what is encountered in daily life.
  • Compare the risk level to routine physical or psychological examinations.
  • State that a small anticipated benefit is sufficient for ethical justification.
  • Specify that the benefit can be to participants, science, or society.

Rubric: To receive full credit, the answer must accurately define minimal risk (harm no greater than daily life or routine examinations) and state that only a small anticipated benefit to participants, science, or society is necessary to ethically justify the research.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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