Short Answer

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.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-26

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related