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Ethics & Communication Research Today’s Class: • Brief overview of history & traditions of research with human subjects, some famous cases that influenced standards & policies about research ethics • current situation at SFU & in Canada (guest : Gary McCarron, member of SFU REB) • Presentations of readings • Planning 2nd round of reading presentations • Discussion of research design assignment and strategies for planning final term paper Historical Practices as Contexts for Emergence of Ethical Guidelines • History: idea of human subject protection relatively new • Medical & Psychological Experiments • Examples Questionable Ethics in research – experiment • Milgram obedience study – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment • Zimbardo –Stanford prison experiment – www.prisonexp.org – Another Zimbardo link • Tuskegee syphilis study – www.hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/apology/report.html Links to Web Sites • New Tri-council guidelines for ethical treatment of human subjects (Canada) – New guidelines http://www.rcr.ethics.gc.ca/eng/policy-politique/framework-cadre/ – Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) SSHRC homepage • Office of Research Ethics at SFU • Reading List for aboriginal research ethics – http://www.ecdip.org/ethics/readings.htm Why Be Ethical? (Motivations) • Researcher’s personal & scholarly values • Guides to Best Practices, – codes of ethics -professional associations – Legislation – Requirements of Funding Agencies • Even with good intentions researchers can make mistakes Stanford Prison Experiment “debriefing”: One of the most abused prisoners, #416, and the guard known as "John Wayne", who was one of the most abusive guards, confront each other in an "encounter session" two months later. Motivations for unethical research – Career pressure – Ego (“knowing the right answer”) – Political agendas (ex. P. Rushton on race) – cheaper, faster, career advancement, prestige, etc. – Ignorance etc… Ethical Issues: stakeholders with diverse frameworks • • • • • • scientific community “the subject” individual researcher society/the public sponsors/funding sources legal authorities/government Scientific Misconduct • research fraud – falsification or distortion of data or methods – fabrication • Plagiarism such as – presenting the ideas or words of another as one's own – Failure to give credit (citation plagiarism) – SFU tutorial on plagiarism http://www.lib.sfu.ca/help/tutorials/plagiarism-tutorial • Violation of ethical standards – ex. Failure to ask for informed consent, conducting research on underage children or special populations without proper consent…(etc.) • Falsifying data & Suppression of findings (nonpublication of important findings) Informed Consent Statements (some points to cover) • • • • • • • • • purpose & procedure of study Potential risks and discomfort Provisions for anonymity and confidentiality researcher’s address and source of information statement of voluntary nature of participation and ability to withdraw at any time alternative procedures Provisions for compensation (or not) offer to provide summary of findings Sample form from SFU (Office of Research Ethics) Examples of Scientific Misconduct: Fabricating or “Fudging” Data • Canadian Example: – Dr. R. Chandra (Memorial University) • Seniors’ memory and multivitamins • Infant allergies & baby formulas – No evidence of health benefits, no data-- BUT Chandra held the patent on the multivitamins • Other examples: – http://www.onlineethics.org/Education/precollege/sci enceclass/sectone/chapt4/cs1.aspx – http://www.onlineethics.org/Education/precollege/sci enceclass/sectone/chapt4/cs2.aspx Deception & InjusticeTuskegee syphilis study • • • • • “Depression-era U.S. poster advocating early syphilis treatment. Although treatments were available, participants in the study did not receive them.” http://www.onlineethics.org/cms/9716.asp x#overview Response: Belmont Report: respect for persons, beneficence and justice Deception (lies), withholding treatment, racism? Another website on the history of the study – http://www.brown.edu/Courses/Bio_160/Proj ects2000/Ethics/TUSKEGEESYPHILISSTUDY.html Other forms of scientific misconduct • Failure to share credit – R. Franklin and discovery of DNA • suppression of unpopular research projects & misuse of incomplete findings – XYY controversy—genetic screening of newborns • Suppression of findings – “Love Canal”—keeping knowledge of toxic waste site secret & putting publics in danger to protect corporations Ethics & Legality Typology of Legal and Moral Actions in Research Ethical Illegal Only Immoral Only Legal Illegal Both Moral and Legal Both Immoral and Illegal Unethical Source: figure adapted from Neuman (2000:91) Ethical Treatment of Research Subjects Types of Harm • physical harm • psychological abuse, stress, loss of selfesteem • legal harm • other possible forms of harm – – – – financial, G.P.A. , etc. creation of inequities denial of treatment placebos in experimental research Milgram obedience study • “Illustration of the setup of a Milgram experiment. The experimenter (E) convinces the subject ("Teacher" T) to give what he believes are painful electric shocks to another subject, who is actually an actor ("Learner" L). Many subjects continued to give shocks despite pleas of mercy from the actors.” • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Milgram_Experiment_v2.png Suggested Reading “emasculating the victim” Decline –’inner-directed masculinity breaks down’ • Nicholson, Ian (2011) “Shocking Masculinity. Stanley Milgram, ‘Obedience to Authority’ and the Crisis of Manhood in Cold War America” ISIS. (June 2011) 102(2): 238-268. Zimbardo –Stanford prison experiment Stanford Prison Experiment “debriefing”: One of the most abused prisoners, #416, and the guard known as "John Wayne", who was one of the most abusive guards, confront each other in an "encounter session" two months later. • • www.prisonexp.org Another Zimbardo link • Film clips from Quiet Rage Film: Quiet Rage: The Standford Prison Experiment Bennett Media Collection BF 80.7 U62 S73 2005 Newer Approaches Raise More Nuanced Concerns • Cultural Taboos & rights – sharing secret or sacred knowledge – Owning one’s stories • Institutional Constraints vs. Subject’s wishes – • What if subject WANTS to be identified? Practical Complexities & Political or Moral Commitments – Counting Refugees Pansy Napangardi painting a Dreaming Other Examples: Portrayals of Victims, Photography of Street Life & things • Tip Sheet on how to portray famine victims with dignity (Reuters) – http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefres ources/112669600053.html • Photography of Street Life in Canada – The Duclos Affair & Quebec law • http://www.montrealmirror.com/200 5/080405/news1.html • Photographing architecture or public art (national variations in intellectual property rights) Fatou Ousseini lies with her malnourished one-year-old son Alassa Galisou at an emergency feeding clinic in the town of Tahoua in northwestern Niger (Reuters_ Deception and covert observation • formerly common practices • Problems: – Defies Principle of voluntary INFORMED consent – Potential for harm to subjects – e.g. Laud Humphrey Tearoom Trade – http://web.missouri.edu/~philwb/Laud.html Who can give consent? • Participation must be voluntary; not coerced • Not applicable to special populations – e.g. military personnel, students, prison inmates, mentally challenged – not capable of giving true voluntary informed consent because: • can’t make the decision (mental incapacity, immaturity) • not truly “free” (could be directly or indirectly coerced, or cannot refuse) – for example, the military and total institutions, like prisons • But how much information is given for ‘informed consent’ varies by type of method – Ex. often experimental research requires deception • Potential benefits of research must outweigh risks Privacy, Anonymity, Confidentiality • privacy: a legal right (note : public vs. private domain)--even if subject is dead • anonymity: subjects remain nameless & responses cannot be connected to them (problem in small samples) • confidentiality: subjects’ identity may be known but not disclosed by researcher, identity can’t be linked to responses Contemporary Legal Requirements & Ethical Research? • FOIPOP (Freedom of Information & Protection of Privacy Act) • Should researchers always respect confidentiality? • Laws require reporting of information about plans to commit illegal acts • Challenge??: What happens when researcher’s promises conflict with the law? • SFU regulations—limits to protection of researchers (reference case: assisted suicide study by SFU grad. student): • Russel Ogden v. SFU (c. 1994) http://www.sfu.ca/~palys/OgdenPge.htm • Russel Ogden Decision Review (1998) http://www.sfu.ca/~palys/ogden.htm Ethics & the Scientific Community: Codes of Ethics & Other standards • guide, control & regulate members • protect researchers from outside pressures • protect others from irresponsible practitioners • New Tri-council Policy on ‘serious breaches’ – Tamburri, R. “Tri-council changes policy to curtail incidents of academic fraud” Univeristy Affairs, Feb. 2012,pp 34-35 or onlinehttp://www.universityaffairs.ca/tri-council-changespolicy-to-curtail-incidents-of-academic-fraud.aspx Ethical Issues related to Research Sponsors • balancing allegiances • “cooking” results unintentionally (the Lake Wobegon Effect) • biases from limits on conditions & resources • suppressing findings • concealing the sponsor How Society & Government Shape Research • • • • • legislation “politically correct” or “safe” topics control of access to data (gatekeepers) biases in government statistics issues: – – – – censorship, public opinion national security public good funding priorities of government granting agencies Ethical Debates about Research Findings • “models of relevance” – no net effects, positive & negative effects, special constituencies • control over use of findings • control of raw data – especially subject information • academic freedom – autonomy of research Ethics and Basic Ideas about Science & Research Paradigms – Objective ? opposed to subjective, logical, rational not arbitrary – value free ? amoral, neutral, not prejudiced – unbiased ? nonrandom error eliminated, not influenced by personal or cultural values Ethics & Practical Aspects of Research Relations: Colleagues & Bosses and the Research Process • getting along with others as part of research • main source of conflict: sharing recognition & workload & resources Common types of relationships (university researchers) • student-student (teamwork, study groups, classmates) • student-professor (class relationships, research assistantships, teaching) • research &/or authorship teams (junior & senior authors, questions of recognition and remuneration) • employee/employer relationships (authorship, remuneration,) • sponsors/funding organizations – Controversy about influence of corporate funders: • U. Toronto, pharmaceutrical funding & Dr. Nancy Olivieri – http://www.ideacityonline.com/presenters/nancy-olivieri/