Human Subjects Research Pool Overview, Guidelines & Instruction
for Researchers

Each student enrolled in Psychology 201 and 202 and Linguistics 290 and 396 is required to either (1) participate as a subject in 4.5 hours of research and complete research experience reports or (2) read 4 research papers, provided by the class instructor, and write a paper about them, or (3) linguistics students may choose to attend linguistics colloquia.

Everyone who uses the subject pool (principal investigators and research assistants) must follow these rules and procedures so that participants are treated ethically and with respect and that the educational goals of this requirement are met. Any investigator who violates these rules will lose the privilege of using the subject pool. In addition, failure to follow these rules may jeopardize the existence of the human subjects pool. Other universities have lost their human subjects pools due to violations and we cannot afford this loss. Be aware that YOUR compliance to these rules impacts many other researchers!

Principal investigators are responsible for providing these guidelines to their RAs and for insuring that each understands and adheres to them. ALL persons working with participants in the subject pool must study these rules and regulations and complete an "open book" quiz on the regulations. The quiz is posted on the human subjects pool blackboard site. Your study may ONLY be run when the PI and all RAs who have contact of any sort with participants have taken and passed the quiz. The quiz must be passed annually as the protocol is renewed annually and changes are reflected in the quiz content.

All researchers must read the "Psychology Research Participant Pool Participant Guide" at:

psychweb.uoregon.edu/undergrad/humansubjects.htm

It is recommended that researchers also read the Sona Manual located at:

psychweb.uoregon.edu/hs/uo_psych_sona_researcher_manual.pdf

Overview

History

The human subjects research pool was created in 1989 by the Psychology Department. The goals defined at that time were threefold. First, provide participants with an educational research experience. Second, enable students to provide a meaningful contribution to the sum of human knowledge by providing information that may solve important psychological questions. Third, allow graduate and honors students to have access to experimental subjects to carry out their program requirements.

Basic Principles for Conducting Ethical Research with Human Subjects:

  1. Obtain informed consent
  2. Protect subjects from harm
  3. Remove any negative after effects
  4. Adequately debrief subjects
  5. Maintain confidentiality

IRB/privilege/discrimination/responsibilities:

The existence of the Human Subjects Pool and the privilege to use it should not be taken for granted. The University of Oregon Human Subjects Compliance Office requires that the benefits to the students in the HSP outweigh the costs to them. It is equally important that we do no harm, not only to participants in our individual studies but to ALL possible participants in the HSP. To this end, we have a strict ANTI-DISCRIMINATION policy. Below are some characteristics of the HSP. Based on the demographic makeup of the HSP, it would be discriminatory for studies to attempt to recruit equal numbers of males and females, or to do studies with males only, as this disadvantages the majority of females from being able to complete their experiment requirement. It is not therefore discriminatory to do studies with females only. It is fine to actively recruit minorities for studies that are studying minorities as a central question for investigation, however it is less permissible to exclude minorities. Each term, all studies that would like to restrict participation based on any demographic characteristic will be considered together. Well-justified restrictions will be permitted only if a small number of studies have the restriction. Restrictions based on physical ability to complete the study (for example, normal hearing or normal/corrected vision) will generally be allowed. Please make this clear when requesting a restriction. Age restrictions are generally not allowed for studies in the HSP.

Characteristicsof the HSP

 
Fall 2004
Winter 2005
Age
Mean (SD)
19.64 (3.45)
20.8 (3.75)
 
Range in years
17 - 52
17 - 55
Ethnicity
Caucasian
78.6%
79%
 
Asian/Pacific islander
9.9%
7.6%
 
Hispanic
2%
5%
 
Native American
0.5%
1.7%
 
Other/biracial
9%
6.7%
Native English speakers
93%
93.4%
Gender
Female
71%
64%
Year in School
Freshman
45%
50%
 
Sophomore
31%
24%
 
Junior
15%
17%
 
Senior
7%
8%
 
Other
2%
1%
Sexuality
Gay/lesbian
1%
1%

In addition to the aboveanti-discrimination policy, the IRB further requires that all studies using the HSP address the issue of confidentiality in their protocols. All data must be kept separate from any identifying information such as surnames or contact information. Each protocol, in order to receive approval, must follow this rule.

Applying to Run Studies with the Human Subject Pool

Only researchers affiliated with the Psychology and Linguistics Departments may use participants from the HSP.

These include:

  1. Faculty members, graduate students, and post docs supervised by faculty members.
  2. Undergraduates in the Psychology Honors Program or in the Honors College, supervised by their Psychology or Linguistics faculty advisor.
  3. Faculty members or graduate students outside the Psychology Department if approved in advance by the Executive Committee and sponsored by a Psychology Department faculty member. Download the application form (pdf). These "special case" researchers are usually adjunct faculty and visiting scholars.

Note: ALL studies must have IRB approval before they can be run using the HSP. The protocols must specifically state that they are using participants from the human subjects pool. Access protocol application forms at: www.uoregon.edu/~humansub/ Protocols must be reviewed by the Psychology Dept Unit Reviewer (Rich Marrocco) or Linguistics Unit Reviewer (Lisa Redford) before being sent to the IRB. ALL debriefing forms must also be approved by the HS coordinator. Email the debriefing form to the HS coordinator before sending the protocol to the unit reviewer. When the HS coordinator approves the debriefing form, both the PI and the unit reviewer are informed via email.

If you are eligible to apply and have IRB approval, complete this online form to apply for subjects. New applications must be filled out EACH term that you wish to use the HSP.

ONE application per researcher, per term, please.

Subject Allocation Procedure

Historically demand by researchers has exceeded the supply of available subjects hours in the HSP. To address this issue, the current allocation system was approved at the October 3, 2004 Psychology Department faculty meeting. Subsequent researcher/faculty feedback inspired some minor revisions. The current system in place is detailed below.

Allocations are on a per experimenter/PI basis. The applicant should be using the data for his or her own project/publication/requirement. Allocations are made available in Sona by Monday of week 1 of the term. PIs who have used all of their credits are eligible for additional credits from a reserve pool of credits which are released at the end of weeks 3 and weeks 6 of the term. In order to be eligible for these reserve credits, the PI must have opened all of their existing credits as time slots in the HSP. Unscheduled research credits are forfeited by PIs at the end of week 8 of each term and these are redistributed to researchers who have (a) scheduled all of their credit hours and (b) requested more research credit hours. The human subjects coordinator sends a probe email to solicit requests at each of these three redistribution times. There is no formal application process, just reply to the email to say how many additional subjects you could use.

Pooling credits within a lab. If several researchers in one lab are collaborating on multiple studies, they should each apply as a PI. If they wish to pool all of their credits into one lab account in Sona so as to move credits freely between studies, this should be noted on the application form.

Type of Psych/Ling Researcher Category Initial allocation Additional allowed from reserve¹
Honors & Special cases

20

20

PhD, Masters & Post docs

40

60

Faculty

60

140

First year project requirement²

60

140

Dissertation³

100

100

¹ After the forfeiture at the end of week 8, all researchers are eligible for additional credits, regardless of whether or not they have received additional allowances of credits
² Student must be working on their FYP and must not have submitted FYP to Lori Olsen/graduate school.
³ Student must be ABD and collecting dissertation data with these research credit hours

Recruiting Subjects and Posting or "Advertising" Studies in Sona

  1. Participants may be recruited in two ways:
    1. Participants enroll in your study using the web-based Sona scheduling system. You post time slots and students sign up for times that are convenient for them. The only information students have about the study is the study name (probably a tree name), and study location.
    2. Researchers who use the Prescreen may contact eligible participants directly via email or phone, based on responses from the Prescreen survey. There are several means for contacting participants, and as Sona gets upgrades 2 or 3 times a year, this will be revised. How you contact students (e.g., call people directly, or send a group email where you are blind to peoples' name) will affect your protocol, so research this before submitting your application. See the Sona manual for the latest information about possibilities. Also see the section below about prescreening. You may check with the HS coordinator about latest upgrades and options.

  2. CHECKLIST: before a study is made available to students this is what's needed:
    1. Proof of IRB approval with your application.
    2. Continuing studies: the correct protocol number is sufficient.
    3. New studies: a photocopy of the one page protocol approval memo should be submitted with your application.
    4. The PI on the allocation application must also be a PI on the IRB protocol. Students collecting data under their advisors' umbrella protocol(s) MUST be added to that protocol in order to collect data.
    5. Restrictions to participation must be approved by the Human Subjects Pool Committee in the psychology department (request restrictions when you apply for subjects).
    6. Restrictions cannot be prejudicial in any way. E.g., since the HSP is 70% women, a study recruiting only males will not be approved for data collection in the HSP. Allowable restrictions vary each term and so you must apply each term.
    7. Make sure you provide a justification EACH time you apply for a restriction. If the restriction is central to the research, e.g., only Japanese speakers because the hypothesis is about Japanese speakers, the restriction will likely be approved. If there are age restrictions, say 18-30 year olds only, this will likely NOT be approved. See section I above about discrimination policies.
    8. All research assistants and the PI must complete the department's HSP quiz on the HSP blackboard site. This quiz is updated each fall and must be completed every fall. All research assistants listed on an application for subjects are automatically added to the HSP blackboard site and can access the quiz under "course assignments."
    9. The Sona experiment listing must be approved by the HS coordinator. Sometimes the HS coordinator creates this for you, but you do have the option of setting up your own study.
  3. Study De-activation:
    1. If you are done with an experiment, please de-activate the study on the system. Do this by selecting "change study information" in Sona, and then choose the "no" option next to "active study?"
    Automatic Deactivation Happens When:
    1. Protocol approval expires. Time slots cannot be posted past the expiry date.
    2. Changes are made to an experiment in the system. Exceptions are adding and removing personnel listed as researchers in the scroll down menu, and adding/removing time slots
    3. System clean up occurs at the end of each term.
  4. Rules for Posting Studies and Scheduling/Canceling Time Slots:
    1. You must provide a clear means for participants to contact the researcher in charge. This should include an email address and a phone number.
    2. Information that may encourage students to sign up for a particular study (e.g., "Only 20 minutes", "Study involves completing a survey") is absolutely PROHIBITED.
    3. When posting the study length, round UP to the nearest half hour.
    4. Each half hour = ½ research credit
    5. Apart from directions for finding the study location, placement of ANY descriptive information about a study in sections visible to participants is absolutely PROHIBITED.
    6. If you need to cancel a time slot, you must do so by 9 p.m. the day before the study is to run. If you cancel later than this, or if a researcher no-shows to a study, the participants must each receive 50% of the research credit value of the study rounded UP to the nearest half hour. Each PI/researcher is responsible for assigning these credits in Sona.
    7. Minimize cancellations. If you post your time slots far in advance, it is a great inconvenience and frustration to students if you cancel the day before. First email the study through Sona (their email address is beside their sign-up name), and try to reschedule if they have had the appointment for some time. Do this before you select the cancel button, as you cannot email them after you cancel their sign up.
    8. Compensating problematic cancellations. Be aware that students have participation deadlines set by their instructors. If you have to cancel and they miss a deadline you should compensate them by offering to tell them about the study and adequately debrief them so that they can complete their research experience report, OR reschedule them in time for the report to be done.
    9. Canceling late in the term: This is particularly problematic. Students have limited time late in the term and canceling in week 9 or 10 could result in an incomplete for the student. Do NOT cancel studies after week 8 if you can at all prevent it. Try to find alternate RAs to run the subject(s) rather than canceling, OR offer to reschedule when you cancel.
    10. If assigning a penalty, do so within 12 hours or the student will receive credit automatically in Sona.

Online Prescreening: Find the Hard-to-Find Participant!

  1. The Prescreen: This is a short (25 minute maximum) survey that most participants complete for ½ credit. It allows them to qualify for particular studies. Every student in the HSP is prompted by Sona upon login to complete this prescreening survey and it is estimated the up to 90% of students complete it.
  2. Eligible Researchers: ALL qualified researchers in the HSP are eligible to contribute a short measure to the prescreen. Sona provides several options for how one can utilize the prescreening procedure for filtering and selecting participants to studies. These are detailed below.
  3. Type of Screen: Many types of measures may be used in the prescreening as long as they are short. Multiple choice questions are most efficient and enable researchers to use more features for recruiting participants through Sona. The prescreening in the past has been used to find particular demographics, right-handed students, particular language speakers, to screen for personality traits, particular attitudes, clinical features such as ADHD, head injuries or depression, and particular types of experiences such as parents divorced or trauma history.
  4. Applications: Each term the prescreening has a separate protocol which must be approved by the IRB. Therefore researchers' applications are due several weeks before the start of each quarter to accommodate this process. All applicants must have prior IRB approval to use the prescreen for their particular protocol.
  5. Time constraints: A typical participant should be able to complete the questions for one measure in less than 2 minutes. If more than 11 researchers apply to use the prescreen, these restrictions may be tightened further based on the need for the total prescreen to take no more than 30 minutes for a majority of students (including 5 minutes for consent and debriefing). Researchers are encouraged to pilot their measures with at least two students in their lab to get an accurate time estimate.
  6. Limitations:
    1. Measures in the prescreen enable a researcher to efficiently screen and recruit likely participants. Because of time constraints, long measures are no appropriate. For example, measures such as the 28-item Dissociative Experiences Scale or the 21-item Beck Depression Inventory are too time-consuming for the Prescreening. Shortened measures such as the Dissociative Taxon or 6 to 10 key questions from the BDI are more appropriate for the actual prescreening.
    2. Any questions about suicidality are not permitted.
    3. The prescreen is not for final data collection: See general survey section.

  7. Note: Researchers using the Prescreen should schedule eligible participants as soon as possible in the term, especially if screening for relatively rare characteristics. Otherwise, eligible students may sign up for other studies before they have a chance to do your study. Starting in the Fall of 2005, the HS committee will start tracking the number of eligible students and the number of successfully recruited for each Prescreen measure. Please be prepared to report this at the end of each term.

Scheduling Participants from Prescreening Data:

You have several options for using the pre-screening features. Make sure that you explicitly state in your IRB protocol which of these features you are using.

  1. Study Displayed to All Eligible Participants Only:
    1. Good for high base rate populations
    2. Methodological bonus: Participants are "blind" to the fact that they qualify for your study
    3. Researchers have found this method fine for running ~ 100+ subjects/term
    4. Favorite option of the IRB because students are anonymous.
    5. To match students to prescreen scores you need their login ID in Sona but not their name
    6. Greatly reduces your lab labor load

    How it works: Sona automatically scores items from your measure and then displays your study ONLY to those participants who meet your eligibility criteria. You can set eligibility criteria based on responses to single items or based on the sum or average of a set of items. You can choose any range for the score, e.g., people who score < 10 and > 20 on your measure, or only people who score between 10 and 15 on your measure.

  2. Study Displayed to All Eligible Participants and They Receive Email Invitations from You Through Sona
    1. Good for high and low base rate populations
    2. Researchers have found up to 70% of eligible participants will do the studies if contacted early in the term
    3. Recruit from a LARGER subject base! If you contact subjects directly (see below option #3), you miss out on subjects who do not provide contact information. This option uses the subjects' Sona accounts, so all eligible participants receive your recruitment message, even if they did not provide an email address in the prescreen.
    4. IRB likes anonymity and favors this option over (#3 below) directly contacting participants individually
    5. Low recruitment effort on your part
    6. You can EITHER use a password for your study so only eligible participants sign up OR you can combine this with option #1, and restrict who sees your study on the list of available studies.
    7. You need to (likely) open more time slots than you will use in order to have students find suitable times for their schedules
    8. Do NOT use this option if you are sending messages to far more students than you have time slots available. In that case, use option #1 above.
    9. Students are no longer "blind" to the fact that they somehow specially qualify for your study.

    How it works: You ask Sona to send the message to eligible participants. You can choose them based on these options: (1) Mean, sum or range of scores on a measure. Questions need to be in m/c format. (2) Specific responses to individual m/c questions (e.g., (Q1) right handed (Q2) women who (Q4) have children younger than three (Q5) who are divorced).

  3. Individually Recruit Subjects For Your Study by Manually Scheduling:
    1. Good for researchers running low base rate populations which also have scheduling difficulties
    2. Good for studies that require further screening on the telephone (Scripts must be approved by the IRB and the Human Subjects Pool Committee)
    3. Good for studies that require further explanation (e.g., explaining the experience/risks of being in the MRI machine)
    4. Good for studies running pairs of subjects or other studies that always use manual sign up anyway
    5. Subjects lose anonymity. Address this risk in your protocol.
    6. Students often get lost, or confused about the day/time when they make appointments over the phone. Researchers MUST schedule these immediately in Sona so the student receives email confirmation and has the ability to cancel the study electronically.
    7. Do NOT use this option if you are sending messages to far more students than you have time slots available. In that case, use option #1 above.

    How it works: When you are ready to recruit subjects, you receive a print out of subjects' first names, login id, and a phone number and/or email address that they provide if they want to be contacted for follow up studies. You receive an Excel sheet with your measure and the login ID of the student so that you can match this to the call sheet. NOTE: the IRB does not permit the call sheets to be reproduced in anyway. You cannot enter students' contact info into a data base of any sort and it must be kept separate from their responses to your measures. You either call or email the students and use a script to relay information about the study to subjects. The script may in NO way use persuasive information to entice students to do your study. This is strictly PROHIBITED when using the Human Subjects Pool. You may not say things like, "you'll get a full hour credit but it's only a 45 minute study," or "this study is really fun." You can only provide factual information. You arrange a meeting time and sign them up manually in Sona. You can also allow them to sign themselves up by giving them a password (option #2 above) or having Sona only allow them to see your study if they qualify (option #1 above).

The Experimental Session

  1. Meeting your subjects
    1. Make sure your subjects know where to meet you. If you are running subjects on weekends or evenings, the building may be locked. Make sure you email crystal clear directions so they do not waste time looking for you.
    2. Make sure you are running YOUR subject. Ask the first name of the participant and make sure that person is the one who signed up for your study. It is not uncommon for researchers to run whoever is there "for a study" and then later find out that they ran someone else's subjects. This is problematic because the wrong person gets a penalty, and you may run a duplicate subject accidentally which messes up data collection.
    3. Be respectful. Not all subjects are thrilled to be there, and not everyone will be in a great mood. Your job as the experimenter is to show appreciation for their participation and to be respectful of ALL subjects. NEVER comment about someone's age (e.g., "gee, you're way older than most students"), ethnicity or race, ("what are you anyway?") or other personal things about them. Complaints from students who feel they have been treated disrespectfully can JEOPARDIZE the whole human subjects pool.
    4. Be on time! Do not schedule subjects back to back if you might run over. Students need to know they can get to class/work/the bus/whatever on time.
    5. POST SIGNS like "Wait here for XXStudy nameXX" to reassure your subjects that they are in the right place.
  2. No Shows and Being Late
    1. Experimenter No Shows: Students are expected to wait only 10 minutes for an experimenter. After 10 minutes, it is a "no show" and the student gets 50% of the study credit awarded to his or her account. The experimenter needs to manually award this credit.
    2. Student No Shows: PLEASE give each no show a penalty every time. Researchers who fail to give penalties cause problems for other researchers. Word spreads fast in the dorms about penalties not being awarded and so the incidents of no shows increase quickly if they are not penalized. In the past, we have had terms with exorbitant numbers of no shows (over 50/week) when a few researchers do not take action.
    3. Experimenter is Late: Students are expected to wait only 10 minutes for an experimenter. After 10 minutes, it is a "no show." If the experimenter starts a session late, she should apologize to the student and discuss the experiment ending time before doing the informed consent. Make sure the student is able to stay for the whole study before embarking on the study. Let the student know that s/he will be awarded additional credit if the study runs over time. The student is awarded credit for the amount of time they waited for the experimenter. If the student needs to leave on time, and thus there is not enough time to run the study, award the student 50% credit as you would for an experimenter no show.
    4. Student is Late:
      1. If you can run the participant, do so. No penalty to the student. Before starting the study, make sure that the student is aware of the time and what the ending time will be. Time that counts toward research credit begins when the study actually begins.
      2. If you cannot run the student, either:
        1. Count it as a no-show and give a penalty
        2. If you are able, it is OK to reschedule and give a no show/no penalty in Sona for the time slot they were late for.
  3. Informed Consent:
    1. In-person studies should give a verbal explanation of the study AND provide participants with ample time to read and sign the informed consent. This time counts as part of the experimental session time. This is the case for single-participants studies, large group testing sessions and everything in between.
    2. On-line studies should provide an informed consent AND provide participants with contact information if they would like additional information before deciding to participate.
    3. Students who do not wish to continue after reading the informed consent must be allowed to leave gracefully and without prejudice. They do not receive credit or penalties. Do NOT attempt to dissuade someone from leaving. Also, be sure the PI is informed of any decline to participate as this information is reported to the IRB annually.
    4. Participants who do wish to participate should sign and date the informed consent. The researcher must retain this form for 3 years, as mandated by the IRB. Participants should be offered a copy (to keep) of the consent form that they signed.
    5. If a participant agrees to participate, signs a consent form and then decides to terminate his/her involvement for any reason: (1) the participant does NOT have to provide an explanation for termination; (2) s/he should be allowed to leave gracefully and should be given a debriefing form; (3) debriefing should be offered to the participant either immediately if feasible, or by appointment if there are other participants still present, (4) the participant should get credit for the amount of time in which s/he participated, rounded UP to the nearest half hour/half credit; (5) the PI should be notified as this decline to participate must be reported to the IRB when the protocol is renewed.
  4. Directions/Protocol:Both the Human subjects protocol AND the individual study protocol must be strictly adhered to. In the event that there is a discrepancy between the two protocols, this should be worked out before data is collected, or as soon as the discrepancy comes to light.
  5. Unexpected Things: (equipment failure, subjects' inability to participate): If the experimental session needs to end suddenly due to some problem on the part of the experimenter OR some issue for the participant, in all cases participants should be: (1) given credit for the amount of time they participated, rounded up to the nearest half hour or given 50% credit for the study, whichever is GREATER; (2) debriefed orally and given a written debriefing form

Debriefing At the End of the Session:

  1. Debriefing must include a minimum 1 page description of the study written in language that subjects can understand. It should explain the purpose of the experiment. To ensure that research participation is an educational experience it is critical that students be educated in some way about research in general and/or about the specific research in which they have just participated. Therefore, it is the experimenter's obligation to clearly explain the specific purpose and procedures of the experiment to the subject at the end of the testing session. All experiments should provide the participant with a general idea of what the experiment was about and why it is of importance (theoretically, practically, or both) and help participants understand the real-world applications of the study. For theoretical studies, researchers should help participants understand how the study contributes to psychological theory. Most students in the HSP have little or no training in psychology and/or linguistics, especially at the beginning of each term. Therefore debriefing descriptions must be jargon-free and targeted to this audience.
  2. All debriefing forms must include directions for how to obtain further information about the study (i.e., name, phone number and office number of the experimenter AND the faculty advisor when the experimenter is a student).
  3. Allow 5 Minutes for Debriefing. This is usually 3 minutes for oral debriefing and 2 minutes for questions/answers. The 5 minute debriefing counts as part of the total time for the study. I.e., a 30 minute, ½ credit study is 25 minutes of informed consent and research participation and 5 minutes of debriefing. If the student elects to stay for a longer debriefing, time beyond the initial 5 minutes does not count toward research credit hours for the student.
  4. Students are entitled to leave on time. Therefore debriefing must begin 5 minutes before the end of the scheduled time slot. If the study is running late for any reason, the researcher must stop 5 minutes before the end of the scheduled time and either (1) begin debriefing; (2) negotiate with the student to stay late for additional credit.
  5. On-Line studies: In the case of on-line studies, debriefing will consist of a written debriefing form and contact information for the researcher with an invitation to email questions to the researcher. The researcher should respond to questions in a timely manner.
  6. Amelioration. The experimenter must take steps to ensure that subjects leave the study at least as healthy and happy as when they entered. Research assistants must be trained and prepared to deal with situations where participants may be upset, uncomfortable or disconcerted with the study to help ameliorate negative effects or connect the participant with resources for this amelioration, such as the counseling center or crisis line.

Awarding Research Credits and Penalties:

  1. Experimenters record all research credits via Sona. Each ½ credit = 30 mins of participation or less. A 70 minute study (including the 5 minute debriefing) = 1 ½ credits. Studies that go longer than planned need to manually assign the additional (usually ½ credit) to the participant in Sona.
  2. If after reading the "Informed Consent" form (which is required for all experiments) a subject declines to participate in the experiment, he/she should be gracefully excused from the experiment and NOT given credit and NOT given a penalty.
  3. If a student who shows up for an experiment cannot be used for any reason (e.g., the equipment has failed or more subjects than are necessary for a group experiment have arrived), 50% of the research participation credit(s) that the subject would have earned must be assigned, even if the subject is rescheduled. At the time of the rescheduled testing session(s) (if any) the subject must again receive the appropriate credit.

    Additionally, you must avoid any hardship to the student. If it is very late in the term, or if it is the day before a Research Experience Report is due for their class, you should offer/arrange to (1) explain the study to them and what they would have done, and (2) fully debrief them. This enables them to complete their assignment which is worth class points. You may also decide to award FULL credit, if this occurs late in the term, and the 50% credit would be a hardship.
  4. If a student begins to participate in a study and needs to stop for any reason, e.g., they are uncomfortable with the study materials, they feel ill, or they cannot understand what is asked of them, they should be given credit for the amount of time they have participated, rounded up to the nearest half hour. In most cases this will likely be a ½ credit.
  5. For experiments involving multiple testing sessions the subject should receive his/her research credit(s) after completing each session. If after a particular session the subject declines to participate further, the credit(s) earned to that point have be awarded. If a subject participates in one (or more) session(s), but fails to show up for the remaining one(s) and has not rescheduled or canceled he/she should be given one "No Show."
  6. Students may cancel experiments via Sona by 6 p.m. they day before the study. It is a courtesy to accept cancellations after that time if they call you or email you directly. It is up to you as to whether their reason for the late cancellation is legitimate and whether you will allow a "no show/ no credit" or "no show/penalty". You may try to reschedule for another time.
  7. Subject "No Shows." Experimenters should record a "No Show/Penalty" via Sona within 24 hours. The system will assign a 50% credit penalty for a "No Show" by increasing the number of credits required for completion.
  8. Experimenters are to WAIT 10 MINUTES before giving the subject a "No Show."
  9. Researcher "No Shows." This will be handled by the researcher who no-shows. The researcher should grant 50% of the credit value of the study to the student. Students are to wait 10 minutes for the researcher before determining that it is an researcher "no show". It is wise to apologize to the student and explain why there was a no-show in order to maintain a spirit of good will and to show respect for students' time. You can send a short note by writing in the "comments" section in Sona when you award credit. This message is automatically emailed to the student with the credit notification.
  10. To cancel a session email the student through Sona and select the "cancel" button in Sona no later than 9 p.m. the night before the study is scheduled. If the researcher needs to cancel with less notice, he/she should email AND leave a note for the subject(s) on the laboratory door, AND give the participant 50% of the research credit for the study. See section IV-D for further details on cancellation rules and procedures.

Web-Based Experiments

The Sona system has several features for conducting on-line, web-based experiments. You can conduct surveys using Sona's survey feature, or link Sona to your own URL. See the Sona system documentation for detailed instructions. Web-based experiments and surveys are subject to the same IRB requirements as all other studies in the HSP, including informed consent and debriefing procedures. Features are upgraded about 3 times each year (usually August, February and May). Check the manual for upgrades or talk to the HS coordinator. There are several time saving features such as copying measures from others' surveys and copying section to section, so make sure you use Sona to its full ability.

General Survey — Short Web-Based Surveys

Like the Prescreen, the General Survey is a means for a variety of researchers to pool their short measures into a single ½ credit/½ hour survey that is administered by the HS coordinator through Sona.

More information about the General Survey is coming soon!