"Unethical experiments" Essays and Research Papers

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    Zimbardo Experiment Ethics

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    emotionally and physically involved. Secondly he denied Richard Yacco the ability to leave. Whenever one conducts an experiment‚ all who are involved should have the right to end their involvement at anytime. Finally there was no proper debriefing‚ as well as it was argued that many left in a worse mental state then prior to the experiment. Now some may not be bothered by such an experiment in fact‚ we have seen other controversial studies such as Mailgrams’ study‚ where he was studying the conflict between

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    Before the experiment the participants should be aware of few things such as; what would be expected‚ the risks‚ the overall purpose and the entitlement. Stanley Milgram had advertised his experiment on a newspaper to get their attention as to needing male participants. From here‚ being informed that there will be two males as one would be a teacher and one would be a learner – even though there would be confederate. The participant would not necessarily be told everything about the experiment as this

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    Matthew J. Hornsey; Louise Majkut; Deborah J. Terry and Blake M. McKimmie of the University of Queensland‚ performed two conformity experiments on university students. These experiments were done too measure the influence of group norms on student ’s attitudes. Experiment one involved 205 university students who rated themselves as being pro-gay law reform. The students were given numerous questions that asked them to rate the moral basis for their attitude‚ and what they believed society ’s

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    Stanford Prison Experiment 1) What police procedures are used during arrests‚ and how do these procedures lead people to feel confused‚ fearful‚ and dehumanized? a. Policemen went around the neighborhood to arrest college students from their houses for robbery‚ burglary‚ and violation of penal codes. After they were searched‚ spread against the police car and handcuffed‚ they brought them to the police station. The guards had worn sunglasses so the suspects wouldn’t be able to look at their eyes

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    Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment 5a) The narrative point of view in the story is third person omniscient. This point of view suits the story because; the story catches all the thoughts and emotions of the characters that experience youth through the “fountain of youth”. The narrator seems to be above all the characters‚ expressing how their presence contributes to the storyline. 5b) The external references are people with an outside perspective or background characters that supports the story

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    The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment took place in Macon County between the years 1932 and 1972. The U.S. Public Health Services teamed up with Tuskegee University to study how syphilis would advance when left untreated. A total of 600 African American were joined in the study‚ out of these men 399 were diseased before the study began and 201 did not have the ailment. All the participants were uninformed of what they were actually being treated for. According to the

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    Role Playing and its Toll In “The Stanford Prison Experiment‚” psychologist Philip G. Zimbardo describes his study of how placing average‚ male‚ college students in a prison like environment proved that their roles dehumanized them as individuals by radically changing their perceptions and behaviors. Before the experiment‚ the subjects were “emotionally stable‚ physically healthy‚ mature‚ law-abiding citizens” (734). With the flip of a coin ten men were chosen to be prisoners and eleven men

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    Zimbardo Prison Experiments The Zimbardo prison experiment was set up to investigate the problem of what the psychological effects for normal people result from being a guard or inmate‚ and in a broader sense are normal people capable of being ‘evil.’ The research question being asked was‚ “How would normal people react to being in a simulated prison environment? In Zimbardo’s own words‚ "Suppose you had only kids who were normally healthy‚ psychologically and physically‚ and they knew they would

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    "The Stanford Prison Experiment was a landmark psychological study of the human response to captivity‚ in particular‚ to the real world circumstances of prison life." What was a psychological study? More as‚ what was the Stanford Prison Experiment? As soon as those words popped up on my screen‚ the very next thing I did was Google it. The very first things that appeared was a deep explanation of exactly what it was; "an attempt to investigate the psychological effects of power between prisoners and

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    Explain the impact of the Stanford prison experiment on psychology and behaviour. The Stanford prison experiment ‚led by professor Philip Zimbardo‚ was aimed at seeing the effect on people on becoming prisoners or prison guards. The idea was to see what happens to people when they are put in relatively ‘evil’ places. Do the people themselves become evil or is there no net effect? The results indicated that in fact people adapt to their role exceptionally well. It was observed that the prison guards

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