Infamous studies in psychology where ethical issues were grossly overlooked
You will examine one of the more infamous studies in psychology where ethical issues were grossly overlooked by preparing a narrated presentation using PowerPoint presentation software. You may use one of the studies discussed in this week’s lesson or choose another.
First, provide a brief overview of the study that you selected, discuss the results/findings, and then provide additional details regarding the ethical concerns or violations and why they are of concern. Outline what the researcher must do to revise this study to conform to today’s ethical codes and standards. Frame your response as if you are an IRB reviewer, and you are communicating the specific steps that the researcher must take to revise their study to gain approval from the NCU IRB. Be sure to describe the particular APA ethical standards and principles that are in violation within your response, and why your recommended revisions are needed before official IRB approvals can be given.
Sample Answer
Narrated PowerPoint Presentation: Ethical Violations in Milgram’s Obedience Study
(Slide 1: Title Slide)
Title: An IRB Review: Re-evaluating Milgram’s Obedience Study for Ethical Compliance
Subtitle: Lessons from a Controversial Experiment
Presented by: [Your Name/IRB Reviewer Name]
Date: May 22, 2025
(Slide 2: Overview of the Milgram Obedience Study)
Brief Overview: Stanley Milgram’s infamous 1963 obedience study aimed to investigate the extent to which individuals would obey an authority figure, even when the commands conflicted with their personal conscience. Participants, recruited through newspaper ads, were told the study was about “memory and learning.” They were assigned the role of “teacher,” while a confederate (an actor) played the “learner.” The teacher’s task was to administer electric shocks of increasing