Facebook's Emotional Contagion Experiment as a Challenge to Research Ethics
Keywords
Soziologie, AnthropologieSozialwissenschaften, Soziologie
Publizistische Medien, Journalismus,Verlagswesen
Sociology & anthropology
Social sciences, sociology, anthropology
News media, journalism, publishing
Big data; emotional contagion; informed consent; manipulation; research ethics; user data
interaktive, elektronische Medien
Wissenschaftssoziologie, Wissenschaftsforschung, Technikforschung, Techniksoziologie
Forschungsarten der Sozialforschung
Interactive, electronic Media
Sociology of Science, Sociology of Technology, Research on Science and Technology
Research Design
Soziale Medien
Emotionalität
Datengewinnung
Forschung
Wissenschaftsethik
Datenschutz
Privatsphäre
Methodologie
social media
emotionality
data capture
research
science ethics
data protection
privacy
methodology
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/53821https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.v4i4.579
Abstract
This article analyzes the ethical discussion focusing on the Facebook emotional contagion experiment published by the 'Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences' in 2014. The massive-scale experiment manipulated the News Feeds of a large amount of Facebook users and was successful in proving that emotional contagion happens also in online environments. However, the experiment caused ethical concerns within and outside academia mainly for two intertwined reasons, the first revolving around the idea of research as manipulation, and the second focusing on the problematic definition of informed consent. The article concurs with recent research that the era of social media and big data research are posing a significant challenge to research ethics, the practice and views of which are grounded in the pre social media era, and reflect the classical ethical stances of utilitarianism and deontology.Date
2017-09-29Type
ZeitschriftenartikelIdentifier
oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/538212183-2439
http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/53821
https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.v4i4.579
Copyright/License
Creative Commons - Namensnennung 4.0Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Multi-sectoral data linkage for intervention and policy evaluationLyons, Ronan (2016-07-05)
-
DATA QUALITY IN CROSS-NATIONAL SURVEY. The Quality Indicators Response Rate, Nonresponse Bias and Fieldwork EffortsHalbherr, Verena (2016-07-05)
-
Trialling a new Survey Project Management Portal on the European Values Study 2017Brislinger, Evelyn; Kurti, Dafina; Davari, Masoud; Klas, Claus-Peter (2018-07-03)