Soliday Elizabeth, Stanton Annette L
Ethics Behav. 1995;5(1):87-104. doi: 10.1207/s15327019eb0501_6.
Research examining the possible effects of deceptive research participation on participants' perceptions of psychology has yielded equivocal results. The present study's goal was to clarify the possible effects of participation in mildly deceptive research on participants' impressions of scientific and applied psychology. Participants (N = 112) were randomly assigned to one of six experimental conditions: active groups receiving negative, positive, or no feedback, or passive groups receiving negative, positive, or no feedback. Following participation, participants completed measures of impressions of psychotherapy and psychotherapists, researchers, and instructors. The manipulation did not affect attitudes toward psychology on any of the dependent measures, although gender effects resulted on one measure. Participants in general reported very positive attitudes toward the science and practice of psychology. Recommendations are offered for future research on the effects of more extensive deceptions.
关于欺骗性研究参与对参与者对心理学看法的可能影响的研究结果并不明确。本研究的目的是阐明参与轻度欺骗性研究对参与者对科学心理学和应用心理学印象的可能影响。参与者(N = 112)被随机分配到六个实验条件之一:接受负面、正面或无反馈的主动组,或接受负面、正面或无反馈的被动组。参与研究后,参与者完成了对心理治疗与心理治疗师、研究人员和教师印象的测量。尽管在一项测量中出现了性别效应,但该操作在任何一项因变量测量上均未影响对心理学的态度。总体而言,参与者对心理学的科学和实践报告了非常积极的态度。针对未来关于更广泛欺骗影响的研究提出了建议。