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Which of the following are the three primary categories of risk to participants that researchers must proactively identify during the study design phase?
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Minimizing Risks through Research Design Modification
Minimizing Risks through Pre-screening
Confidentiality
Weighing Risks Against Benefits
Research Protocol
According to best practices in study design, why is it essential for researchers to seek input from collaborators and non-researchers when identifying potential risks?
In psychological research, identifying risks is a critical step in the design phase. Match each aspect of risk identification with the description that best explains its role or nature from the perspective of the researcher.
A researcher is designing a study on cognitive performance that includes a highly stressful time limit. Because the researcher is personally comfortable with high-pressure tasks, they decide to rely solely on their own judgment to conclude that the psychological stress for participants will be 'minimal.' In this scenario, the researcher is following the recommended best practices for identifying research risks.
Analyze the process of comprehensive risk identification in psychological research. Arrange the following steps in the logical order required to systematically expand a researcher's viewpoint and mitigate the common tendency to underestimate hazards to participants.
Which of the following are the three primary categories of risk to participants that researchers must proactively identify during the study design phase?
Seeking input from non-researchers is considered essential during the study design phase because researchers are prone to underestimating how participants will perceive the severity of potential hazards.
A researcher concludes that their study on academic stress is low-risk without seeking any outside input. This evaluation is likely to be flawed because researchers have a documented tendency to _____ the severity of potential hazards relative to how participants perceive them.
A researcher is designing an experiment on public speaking anxiety. Match each step of their risk-assessment process to the corresponding ethical concept.
In analyzing why a researcher might minimize the distress caused by an experimental task, study design principles suggest that researchers are prone to _____ potential hazards relative to the participants' actual experience.
Evaluate the risk-identification workflow for a new study by arranging the steps in order from the initial, researcher-centric assessment to the final step that incorporates the participant's perspective.
According to the principles of identifying research risks during the study design phase, what are the three specific categories of potential risk to participants that researchers must proactively identify, and what is the primary reason why researchers must seek external input rather than relying solely on their own assessment of these risks?
In the context of research ethics and study design, explain the pitfall illustrated by Dr. Aris's initial risk assessment. Describe how the input from his collaborator helps address this pitfall, and identify what other types of individuals Dr. Aris should consult to ensure a proper risk assessment.
You are designing a study that investigates how students cope with academic failure by asking them to write about their worst exam experience. To apply ethical study design principles and ensure you do not underestimate the psychological stress or confidentiality risks, what specific action should you take before finalising your protocol, and which three groups of people should you involve?