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You are designing a laboratory experiment on decision-making that takes 40 minutes to complete. How should you structure your session's time allocation to ensure that the informed consent and debriefing procedures are ethically effective?
Question: You are designing a laboratory experiment on decision-making that takes 40 minutes to complete. How should you structure your session's time allocation to ensure that the informed consent and debriefing procedures are ethically effective?
Sample answer: I should intentionally schedule additional, generous blocks of time before and after the 40-minute experiment specifically for consent and debriefing. This ensures participants are not rushed and have ample opportunity to understand the experiment, ask clarifying questions, and absorb the post-study information.
Key points:
- Allocate generous, dedicated time blocks for consent and debriefing outside of the 40-minute task.
- Avoid rushing the participant during these critical ethical steps.
- Provide adequate opportunity for the participant to understand, ask questions, and absorb information.
Rubric: The student should apply the principle of generous time scheduling by suggesting adding dedicated time blocks for consent and debriefing in addition to the 40-minute task, specifying that this prevents rushing and allows participants to understand, ask questions, and absorb info.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Why must researchers intentionally schedule generous amounts of time for conducting informed consent and debriefing procedures during a study?
Researchers can safely minimize the time scheduled for initial participant agreement and final study explanation procedures as long as all required information is provided in written format.
A researcher has a 60-minute laboratory window for each participant in a study involving mild deception. Match each proposed session schedule with the most accurate evaluation of its ethical approach to time allocation for consent and debriefing.
A researcher is analyzing the sequence of events required for a participant to effectively integrate new information during an ethical protocol (such as consent or debriefing). Sequence these steps based on the temporal needs of the participant, from the first exchange of information to the final state of properly absorbed understanding.
According to the principles of study design, what specific opportunity must researchers provide by allocating generous amounts of time for informed consent and debriefing?
Match each ethical goal of allocating generous study time with the specific participant need it addresses during the informed consent or debriefing process.
A researcher plans a 20-minute laboratory study on color perception. To maximize efficiency, they allocate 90 seconds for participants to review and sign the consent form and 60 seconds for debriefing at the end, reasoning that the study is low-risk and the consent form is brief. Applying the principle of time allocation for ethical procedures, this schedule adequately meets the requirements for informed consent and debriefing.
A research team is comparing two session schedules for an identical study: Schedule A allocates 10 minutes for informed consent and 8 minutes for debriefing, while Schedule B allocates 2 minutes for each procedure. Analyzing the difference in ethical quality, the team concludes that Schedule B _____ the informed consent and debriefing processes because participants are denied the time needed to understand the study, ask clarifying questions, and absorb the information provided.
A student researcher is asked to evaluate whether a proposed study schedule ethically supports the informed consent and debriefing processes. Arrange the following steps in the most logical order for assessing the schedule's adequacy.
An Institutional Review Board (IRB) is evaluating a research proposal that includes all required disclosures but schedules them within a timeframe that allows only two minutes for the entire interaction. The board determines that the _____ of the consent process is severely compromised because participants are not given the opportunity to ask clarifying questions or properly absorb the information.
According to the principles of study design, why must researchers intentionally schedule generous amounts of time for conducting both the informed consent and debriefing procedures?
Based on the required conditions for effective consent and debriefing, explain how the researcher's scheduling choice compromises the ethical integrity of this study.
You are designing a laboratory experiment on decision-making that takes 40 minutes to complete. How should you structure your session's time allocation to ensure that the informed consent and debriefing procedures are ethically effective?