Research Ethics and Introduction Section
Across
- 1. pregnant women, children, & individuals with language and/or cognitive deficits
- 8. manipulating materials, methodology, lying about results, etc. done intentionally
- 9. no significant difference between variables in the study, stated in the negative
- 11. specific to general statement
- 12. Belmont Report; respect & honor decisions, send informed consent form
- 14. in introduction section, stems from general statement of the problem, gives purpose of study
- 15. to ensure best current proven intervention is being provided to those who need it
- 20. in introduction section, summary of past studies in the area, acknowledging any gaps in research or conflicting results
- 21. general to specific statement
- 22. predicts results in a specific direction
- 23. formal included in introduction section, statement of predicted outcome, tentative answer to research question
- 24. making up data or results
- 25. established by Nuremburg Code, independent review bodies in colleges, universities, hospitals, and other institutions that review research involving human subjects or animals, consisting of 5+ members from diverse backgrounds
Down
- 2. stated at the end of the introduction section, specific, descriptive/difference/establishing a relationship
- 3. appropriation of another person's ideas, processes, or words without giving appropriate credit
- 4. ensures sound, logical research practices
- 5. in introduction section, orient reader to what researchers are interested in learning
- 6. foundation for conduct of research
- 7. Belmont Report; fair & unbiased selection of participants, distribution of benefits, equal treatment of people in society
- 10. free choice/voluntary participation in research
- 13. an honest, professional disagreement among expert clinicians about the preferred treatment; true honest uncertainty
- 16. looking at specific difference with no direction
- 17. predicts specific results, 2 types
- 18. Belmont Report; protect people from harm, disclose benefits and risks
- 19. selectively reporting data