facebook research - need some thoughts on facebook and research ethics
Hi everyone, My name's Mary Beth Deline and I'm currently a graduate candidate at the University of Waterloo - I'm hoping I can get some help from the list re: research ethics and Facebook. I'm currently checking out how feasible my thesis proposal is, which concerns using Facebook as a site for an intervention - either by developing an application or posting information on participant's walls (these participant's would have been recruited beforehand). I've contacted Facebook and they referred me to their Terms of Services and said that was all they could do for me. I'm having trouble finding someone who can help me match that (and their Developer Terms of Service) up to the Canadian Tri-Council ethical guidelines. If anyone has any experience using Facebook as an intervention site, or is able to provide guidance/direction on FB and research ethics (either American or Canadian), could you please get in touch with me, on or off the list? I've reviewed the Tri-Council's Feb 08 recommendation paper on Internet research and have searched the archives on this list as well but haven't been able to find anything specifically about using FB as a research 'site'. Thanks in advance, MB mdeline@alumni.sfu.ca
FB as a research site is no different than any other research site, I think both the ethics guidelines and the Tri-council guidelines cover their requirements clearly. I wonder though... what you mean by intervention here. Because it would seem to me that the nature of intervention is going to determine how your work actually plays out in regards to tri-council guidelines. If for instance, you developed a piece of software that people could subscribe to and did not collect any data from them but just had the software do things the user wanted, then you watched their facebook page to see if they user did things differently, but you never interacted with the page. that would, i think, be different, then if you actively post, etc. and talk with your participants. http://www.pre.ethics.gc.ca/english/policystatement/addenda.cfm is the relevant url for the main ethics info. On Mar 3, 2009, at 1:13 PM, marybeth deline wrote:
Hi everyone,
My name's Mary Beth Deline and I'm currently a graduate candidate at the University of Waterloo - I'm hoping I can get some help from the list re: research ethics and Facebook. I'm currently checking out how feasible my thesis proposal is, which concerns using Facebook as a site for an intervention - either by developing an application or posting information on participant's walls (these participant's would have been recruited beforehand). I've contacted Facebook and they referred me to their Terms of Services and said that was all they could do for me. I'm having trouble finding someone who can help me match that (and their Developer Terms of Service) up to the Canadian Tri-Council ethical guidelines.
If anyone has any experience using Facebook as an intervention site, or is able to provide guidance/direction on FB and research ethics (either American or Canadian), could you please get in touch with me, on or off the list? I've reviewed the Tri-Council's Feb 08 recommendation paper on Internet research and have searched the archives on this list as well but haven't been able to find anything specifically about using FB as a research 'site'. Thanks in advance, MB
mdeline@alumni.sfu.ca
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Hi Marybeth I did online research while I was on faculty at UW. You can't do any research with human subjects without going through the REB. You should contact the Research Office for advice and then complete the forms for thesis work on their website. Like the previous poster, I do not understand what you mean by "intervention." It seems that you are implying a form deception, which if the case, I can pretty much assure you that your proposal will not be approved. Also, you can't just post things on people's walls unless they are "friends." Running apps on facebook without people's permission, or maybe even with it, is most certainly a TOS violation. Rhiannon Bury Assistant Professor Women's Studies Athabasca University rbury@athabascau.ca ________________________________ From: marybeth deline <mdeline@alumni.sfu.ca> To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Sent: Tuesday, March 3, 2009 11:13:52 AM Subject: [Air-L] facebook research - need some thoughts on facebook and research ethics Hi everyone, My name's Mary Beth Deline and I'm currently a graduate candidate at the University of Waterloo - I'm hoping I can get some help from the list re: research ethics and Facebook. I'm currently checking out how feasible my thesis proposal is, which concerns using Facebook as a site for an intervention - either by developing an application or posting information on participant's walls (these participant's would have been recruited beforehand). I've contacted Facebook and they referred me to their Terms of Services and said that was all they could do for me. I'm having trouble finding someone who can help me match that (and their Developer Terms of Service) up to the Canadian Tri-Council ethical guidelines. If anyone has any experience using Facebook as an intervention site, or is able to provide guidance/direction on FB and research ethics (either American or Canadian), could you please get in touch with me, on or off the list? I've reviewed the Tri-Council's Feb 08 recommendation paper on Internet research and have searched the archives on this list as well but haven't been able to find anything specifically about using FB as a research 'site'. Thanks in advance, MB mdeline@alumni.sfu.ca _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
participants (3)
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jeremy hunsinger -
marybeth deline -
Rhiannon Bury