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      Research ethics in Internet-enabled research: human subjects issues and methodological myopia.

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          Abstract

          As Internet resources are used more frequently for research on social and psychological behavior, concerns grow about whether characteristics of such research affect human subjects protections. Early efforts to address such concerns have done more to identify potential problems than to evaluate them or to seek solutions, leaving bodies charged with human subjects oversight in a quagmire. This article critiques some of these issues in light of the US Code of Federal Regulations' policies for the Protection of Human Subjects, and argues that some of the issues have no pertinence when examined in the context of common methodological approaches that previous commentators failed to consider. By separating applicable contexts from those that are not, and by identifying cases where subjects' characteristics are irrelevant and/or impossible to provide, oversight committees may be able to consider research applications more appropriately, and investigators may be less ethically bound to ascertain and demonstrate those characteristics.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ethics Inf Technol
          Ethics and information technology
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1388-1957
          1388-1957
          2002
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Communication, Cornell University, 336 Kennedy Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-4203, USA.
          Article
          10.1023/a:1021368426115
          15977362
          f054b2fe-4cdc-4296-9cc9-f2bbafa945bf
          History

          Belmont Report,Biomedical and Behavioral Research,Federal Policy (Common Rule) for the Protection of Human Subjects 1991

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