Litcius/Paper detail

Bending Our Ethics Code

Benjamin E. Hilbig, Isabel Thielmann, Robert Böhm

2021European Psychologist30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract. Deception of research participants has long been and remains a hot-button issue in the behavioral sciences. At the same time, the field of psychology is fortunate to have an ethics code to rely on in determining whether and how to use and report on deception of participants. Despite ongoing normative controversies, the smallest common denominator among psychologists is that deception ought to be a last resort – to be used only when there is no other defensible way to study a question or phenomenon. Going beyond previous normative discussions or inquiries into the mere prevalence of deception, we ask the fundamental question whether common practice is compatible with this interpretation of our field’s ethical standards. Findings from an empirical literature review – focusing on the feasibility of nondeceptive alternative procedures and the presence of explicit justifications for the use of deception – demonstrate that there is a notable gap between the last resort interpretation of our ethical standards and common practice in psychological research. The findings are discussed with the aim of identifying viable ways in which researchers, journal editors, and the scientific associations crafting our ethics codes may narrow this gap.

Topics & Concepts

DeceptionNormativeInterpretation (philosophy)Ethical codePsychologyPhenomenonField (mathematics)Research ethicsSocial psychologyCode of conductCode (set theory)Engineering ethicsEpistemologyLawPolitical scienceComputer sciencePhilosophyPure mathematicsMathematicsEngineeringProgramming languageSet (abstract data type)PsychiatryPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentDeception detection and forensic psychologySocial and Intergroup Psychology
Bending Our Ethics Code | Litcius