Book ChapterDOI
Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct.
Alan E. Kazdin
- pp 495-512
Abstract:
1. Resolving Ethical Issues 1.01 Misuse of Psychologists’ Work 1.02 Conflicts Between Ethics and Law, Regulations, or Other Governing Legal Authority 1.03 Conflicts Between Ethics and Organizational Demands 1.04 Informal Resolution of Ethical Violations 1.05 Reporting Ethical Violations 1.06 Cooperating With Ethics Committees 1.07 Improper Complaints 1.08 Unfair Discrimination Against Complainants and Respondentsread more
Citations
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Borderline Personality Disorder: The Frequency of Disclosure and the Choice to Disclose
TL;DR: Rumpza et al. as discussed by the authors conducted a study to identify what percentage of licensed psychologists and licensed clinical social workers disclose the diagnostic label BPD to their patients and the factors that influence disclosure and gather phenomenological data about the choice to disclose or not to disclose.
Sexual Orientation and Marriage
TL;DR: The authors studied married and cohabiting same-sex couples and found that gay couples exhibit more specialization and less similarity than lesbian couples, while marriage makes gay and lesbian couples more alike than co-habiting couples, in terms of larger earnings differences for lesbians and more positive sorting by education for gays.
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY & NEUROPSYCHOLOGY | REVIEW ARTICLE Intimate attractions and sexual misconduct in the therapeutic relationship: Implications for socially just practice
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss implica- tions for training, supervision, and practice with regard to the therapeutic relation- ship and applications to minority populations, and suggest recommendations to help practitioners distinguish between sexual attractions and intimate behaviors and ad- dress them in ethical, socially just practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Emotion and the False Consensus Effect
TL;DR: The influence of emotion on the false consensus effect was investigated in this paper, where participants made a choice between two forms of vacation, and were induced to feel an emotion (happiness, neutral, or sadness) and then asked to estimate the percentage of people who would opt for either the same choice as them or the alternate choice, and to make an attribution for this predicted behavior.