TY - GEN
T1 - Situational Ethics: Re-Thinking Approaches to Formal Ethics Requirements for Human-Computer Interaction
AU - Munteanu, Cosmin
AU - Molyneaux, Heather
AU - Moncur, Wendy
AU - Romero, Mario
AU - O'Donnell, Susan
AU - Vines, John
PY - 2015/5/18
Y1 - 2015/5/18
N2 - Most Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) researchers are accustomed to the process of formal ethics review for their evaluation or field trial protocol. Although this process varies by country, the underlying principles are universal. While this process is often a formality, for field research or lab-based studies with vulnerable users, formal ethics requirements can be challenging to navigate -- a common occurrence in the social sciences; yet, in many cases, foreign to HCI researchers. Nevertheless, with the increase in new areas of research such as mobile technologies for marginalized populations or assistive technologies, this is a current reality. In this paper we present our experiences and challenges in conducting several studies that evaluate interactive systems in difficult settings, from the perspective of the ethics process. Based on these, we draft recommendations for mitigating the effect of such challenges to the ethical conduct of research. We then issue a call for interaction researchers, together with policy makers, to refine existing ethics guidelines and protocols in order to more accurately capture the particularities of such field-based evaluations, qualitative studies, challenging lab-based evaluations, and ethnographic observations.
AB - Most Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) researchers are accustomed to the process of formal ethics review for their evaluation or field trial protocol. Although this process varies by country, the underlying principles are universal. While this process is often a formality, for field research or lab-based studies with vulnerable users, formal ethics requirements can be challenging to navigate -- a common occurrence in the social sciences; yet, in many cases, foreign to HCI researchers. Nevertheless, with the increase in new areas of research such as mobile technologies for marginalized populations or assistive technologies, this is a current reality. In this paper we present our experiences and challenges in conducting several studies that evaluate interactive systems in difficult settings, from the perspective of the ethics process. Based on these, we draft recommendations for mitigating the effect of such challenges to the ethical conduct of research. We then issue a call for interaction researchers, together with policy makers, to refine existing ethics guidelines and protocols in order to more accurately capture the particularities of such field-based evaluations, qualitative studies, challenging lab-based evaluations, and ethnographic observations.
KW - ethics
KW - field studies
KW - situational ethics
KW - research protocol
KW - vulnerable populations
U2 - 10.1145/2702123.2702481
DO - 10.1145/2702123.2702481
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 9781450331456
T3 - CHI '15
SP - 105
EP - 114
BT - Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
PB - ACM Association for Computing Machinery
CY - New York, NY, USA
T2 - 33rd Annual CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Y2 - 18 April 2015 through 23 April 2015
ER -