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    Zimbardo Experiment Ethics

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    because you need a little extra cash‚ or maybe because you were intrigued by the idea. Either way it was stated something like this‚ “Male college students needed for psychological study of prison life. $ 15 per day for 1-2 weeks.” ( Ratnesar 1). Zimbardo and his team selected 24 men‚ to participate in this study half of the men would randomly be selected to be prisoners and half of the men would be prison guards. The guards were given very specific directions to not harm the individuals‚ yet their

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    Read the material on Milgram & Zimbardo and explain which study is the most useful in understanding human behaviour in a social situation (focusing on the methods used and findings obtained) and which study is the most unethical. The study of social psychology‚ particularly conformity‚ is very difficult to conduct both ethically and accurately in order to be able to obtain useful results. In the studies done by Milgram and Zimbardoethics were definitely breached but to what extent were these

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    People tend to believe that there is a clear line between good and evil – with them on one side‚ others always evil. Philip Zimbardo reveals that this line is far more permeable. Good can turn bad‚ and ‘evil’ people capable of redemption. He describes evil as “exercising power to intentionally harm people (psychologically)‚ to hurt people (physically)‚ to destroy people (mortally)‚ or ideas‚ and to commit crimes against humanity”. The question offered is‚ what is it that makes people turn evil? It

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    Zimbardo

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    The Stanford County Prison experiment by Zimbardo (1971) supports Milgram’s study. Zimbardo (1973) experiment took place in a pretend prison house which was created in the basement of Stanford University. This was to investigate the psychological effects of becoming a prisoner/prison guard. Participants in both studies had a difficult time ending the experiment. The participants felt they did not want to appear inconsistent or leave the experiment. Participant’s behaviour was in control by social/professional

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    Philip Zimbardo and His Contributions to Psychology Fall 2013 In today’s fast paced society many of us have a tough time dealing and coping with our problems. This is when psychologists come into play. Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes. It deals with the mind and how we process mental and emotional things. Philip Zimbardo’s thoughts on psychology are‚ “I have been primarily interested in how and why ordinary people do

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    Zimbardo

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    that otherwise good (or at least not actively bad) people can do bad‚ indeed evil things and that this can be explained by the situation in which the acts took place. In 1971 Zimbardo conducted the "Stanford prison experiment" in which students enacted the roles of prison guards and prisoners - the results so traumatised Zimbardo that supposedly he never gave the experiment the complete write-up he intended to. Many years later he acted as an expert witness for the defense of one of the soldiers in

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    zimbardo

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    Zimbardo Experiment Thoughts The prison experiment discussed in this video involves a group of male college students who were later spilt into two completely different roles‚ prisoners and guards. This experiment‚ done in Stanford University‚ was supposed to last two weeks‚ but only lasted about four to the duress and severity the “prisoners” were put through. Dr. Zimbardo conducted the experiment in such a manner where everything was realistic; they formed a mock prison in the basement of a

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    Zimbardo

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    readily people would conform to the roles of guard and prisoner. Participants: 21 males from over 70 volunteers were chosen and paid $15 for each day. Students were randomly assigned to play a different role. Procedure: Zimbardo converted the basement of the Stanford Psychology building into a mock prison. Advertised for students to play either a role of prison guard or prisoner for 2 weeks. Guards were also issued a khaki uniform‚ together with whistles‚ handcuffs and dark glasses‚ to make eye

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    Ethics in Psychology

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    This paper is going to define ethics and examine the concept of the risk and benefit ratio. Research on animals is an ethical topic and concern to researchers in the psychology field. Testing on animals is a controversial issue and in response to this ethical dilemma the American Psychological Association (APA)‚ is a specialized association that represents psychologists in the United States‚ has designed rules and guidelines that must be followed. This author will try to look at how the testing of

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    Psychology: Ethics

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    Ethics Final Exam Study Guide: APA Ethics Code & Professional Behavior Positive Ethics vs. ethics as a way to avoid disciplinary actions Positive ethics is a way of doing good & keeping balanced; could be referred to as a prevention technique‚ whereas‚ the latter is more of a reactionary phase The 3 key risk management principles (Bennett text) (Risk planning; Risk assessment; Risk response development; Risk response control) Principle #1: Risks shall be managed to maximize the total

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