Preview
  • Shocking Psychological Studies and the Lessons They Teach

  • By: Thad Polk, The Great Courses
  • Narrated by: Thad Polk
  • Length: 3 hrs and 5 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (295 ratings)

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Shocking Psychological Studies and the Lessons They Teach

By: Thad Polk, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Thad Polk
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Publisher's summary

We live in a time of amazing new technologies - and an unparalleled level of surveillance. Virtually every aspect of human behavior is tracked millions of times a day through the technology that we all, often without giving it a thought, use every day. The collected data has the potential of providing vital insight into the human experience, but can the scientific community explore the psychosocial experience of humanity without making victims of us all?

Professor Thad Polk, of the University of Michigan, invites you to join him for Shocking Psychological Studies and the Lessons They Teach, a six-lecture course exploring a range of shocking psychological experiments from the past that have nonetheless contributed significant insight into the human condition. Dr. Polk elucidates the contemporary ethical principles now in place to protect both subjects and science, but admits that with every new technological and scientific advancement, there also comes a new set of ethical conundrums for researchers to grapple with.

Psychological research today adheres to the Belmont Report’s principles, a set of three ethical principles established in 1976 following the aftermath of research studies that critically failed to protect the rights of the research subjects. Through a look at a series of influential, but flawed, studies, ranging from syphilis to stuttering to psychoactive drugs, Professor Polk explores these ethical principles and how they, in retrospect, might have been applied.

As he concludes Shocking Psychological Studies and the Lessons They Teach, Professor Polk acknowledges that as science still grapples with the ethics of studying human subjects, past mistakes have helped us to create a safer and more enlightened field of scientific research, adhering to ethical research principles.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2020 The Great Courses (P)2020 The Teaching Company, LLC
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What listeners say about Shocking Psychological Studies and the Lessons They Teach

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    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting but not comprehensive

Great content and presentation but it needed to cover additional controversies in studies across the world. No mention of the German Worlds War II studies.

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Leaves you wishing for more.

The studies discussed are definitely shocking but the whole course(?) flies by because of how thought provocative they are. 10/10 would recommend

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Interesting psychological studies

Clearly presented, interesting cases.
Not sure why the over the top dire warnings before each lecture...

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nice intro

this was a good quick intro to several studies. would definitely like a longer course.

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Excellent Audiobook

I definitely recommend this book. You get hooked right from the beginning. And you learn so much. I definitely look forward to listening and reading more of these books in the future.

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informative

I thoroughly enjoyed this course. It was informative and eye opening. I wanted to learn more about each research topic that Thad Polk discusses. Definitely increased my curiosity.

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Outstanding Program!

This program effectively raises serious questions about the ethics, validity, and reliability in social science studies. A must for every science skeptic.

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    3 out of 5 stars

Easy listening missing some crucial information

Enjoyable and informative, but lacking discussion of methodological (not ethical) failings in classic research

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Great & honest lectures!

Listening to these lectures on experimentation gone wrong has made me wonder if these were the result of the scientists wanting acceptance and praise of their peers, or if the scientist were committed to seeing their hypotheses were correct no matter what

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Excellent

The dire content warnings which precede each of the six lectures in this series made me a little bit apprehensive. About halfway through the course, though, I began to wonder: is Professor Polk conducting another of those illustrative experiments/demonstrations upon listeners he sometimes includes in his lectures? Would there be some grand revelation in Lecture 6 concerning our human susceptibility to suggestion?

The material in this course is indeed ‘shocking,’ but it’s delivered in the clinical, matter-of-fact manner typical of a hard-hitting PBS documentary. There is nothing here that the average mature listener cannot handle. Professor Polk’s somewhat bemused "Do-you-believe-this-crazy-stuff?" delivery also helps lighten the mood. Each lecture examines two studies from 20th Century America, before the Belmont Report imposed ethical standards upon scientists engaged in human psychological research. Sex, violence and human degradation are indeed discussed, but only tangentially, for Professor Polk keeps us focused on the questionable ethics and flawed methodology of each study. The goal of the course is to make listeners more aware of the principles which now govern research on human subjects.

Highly recommended.

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10 people found this helpful