Research Participation for Psy 105 and 106:
Instructions for Researchers
Email the Research Participation Coordinator to request an account
You will need a "Principal Investigator" account on the Experiment Management System in order to set up your study. Each person who will conduct experimental sessions will also need to be in the system as a "Researcher" account (including yourself). Thus you will have two accounts, one as a Principal Investigator and one as a researcher, two separate userIDs.
When you email to request an account, please put the following on a single line, separated by commas:
userID, last name, first name, email address
UserID is the login name you want for the account, not your DePaul ID number - your last name is a good default value. Also include a list of any research assistants, etc. for whom Researcher accounts need to be created. For each researcher, list the same four pieces of information on one line, separated by commas. A good default value for UserID for a Researcher account is the researcher's last name with the numeral "1" appended to it.
When sending your request for an account, use the "Email questions to" address listed on the Experiment Management System web site.
Obtain IRB approval
Only studies that have received IRB approval may be posted. You will need your IRB approval number to register a study (but you will no longer need an "experiment number" from the Psychology LRB).
When registering your study in the system, you will be asked to enter your IRB approval code and IRB approval expiration date. You can find this information in the approval memo sent to you by the IRB. If your study was classified by the IRB as exempt there is no expiration date; in that case just select the latest available date on the menu.
Add your study
You can add either a lab study or an online study. Online studies can be created within the Experiment Management System using a point-and-click interface, or you can use a study hosted on an external web site (such as Quickdata). After adding your study to the system be sure to make the study active, and be sure to click the link to email the administrator and request that the study be made visible to students.
For online studies, be sure participants have the option to leave unanswered any questions they do not want to answer. For studies created within the Experiment Management System, that means that for every question you should select "yes" for "Can students decline to provide an answer for this question?" For studies created in Quickdata, that means that you should not make any questions mandatory.
In your description of the study you can state briefly what tasks participants will do, but do NOT indicate how long the session takes to complete. One credit lab studies should say only "60 minutes or less" and two credit studies should say only "2 hours or less." Any type of competitive advertising for participants in the study descriptions is prohibited.
Add time slots
You must add time slots for a lab study so that participants can sign up. You must also do so for online studies, specifying a deadline for participants to complete the study.
Each study has an initial enrollment cap set by the system. If you find that you are unable to add new time slots, it may be because you have reached this cap. Email the coordinator to request an increase in the cap if you need to schedule more subjects.
Remember that all studies must be completed by the last day of regular classes (before finals week). Make sure you do not schedule any signup slots later than that date.
Restrict online studies to evening and loop sections
Online studies must be made available to only loop and evening sections (classes with section numbers greater than 400). After posting signup slots for at least two weeks, you have two options:
- Ask the coordinator to remove the course restriction and make the study available to all sections of Psy 105 and Psy 106 (while keeping the default enrollment cap) or
- Ask the coordinator to increase the enrollment cap (while still restricting enrollment to evening/weekend sections). If the enrollment cap is increased, then the course restriction must be kept in place for the entire quarter.
Download Your Data Promptly
If your online study data is stored within the Experiment Management System, be sure to download your data as soon as data collection is completed (and no later than the end of the quarter). End-of-quarter maintenance operations will erase all data from online surveys and the prescreening survey - therefore it is essential that you download your data before the end of each quarter.
Update Credit and No-Show Records
After each experiment session, log into the Experiment Management System and update the participant records by granting credit to the day's participants, and penalizing any no-shows. If you set "automatic credit granting" to "yes" for your study, then by default credit will be granted once the appointment time has passed and you will only need to go into the system to report no-shows.
For online studies, the automatic credit granting option works a bit differently than you might expect. Rather than granting credit as soon as the participant completes your online survey, the system waits to grant credit until 24 hours after the deadline that you set for completion of the survey, not 24 hours after the student actually does the survey as you might expect. If you use automatic credit granting for online studies, therefore, you should set a deadline no more than about a week in the future, and post new slots each week, rather than setting a deadline of the end of the quarter.
If you use an external web site for an online study (such as Quickdata), be aware that automatic credit granting will award credit to anyone who signs up for your study, whether they complete it or not. (This is because the system has no way of knowing whether an external online study was completed or not.) It is better, therefore, to turn off automatic credit granting for externally hosted online studies and instead do the following:
- After the user submits their data in your online survey, send them to a separate form in which they will input their identity code. In Quickdata, for example, you can change the "next page" that the user is sent to after they submit their survey answers to be another Quickdata form that will be used to collect the identity codes.
- Have the user enter his or her system-assigned identity code in this separate web form. Be sure that you store the identity codes in a separate file or database table (such as a separate Quickdata "form") that is not linked to the survey data.
- Use the identity codes to manually grant credit to all the users who completed your survey
- For anyone who signed up for your online study but did not complete it, record them as a "cancellation," since there is no such thing as a "no-show" for an online study.
Prescreening
A demographic survey is administered each quarter during the first two weeks of class. You can restrict enrollment to your studies based on answers to one or more prescreening questions. You can also restrict access based on participation in other studies. Both of these options are available to all researchers within the Experiment Management System.
If you need to include additional screening questions or measures, you should create an online study in the Experiment Management System with the questions you want to include in prescreening. (As for any other study, prior IRB approval is required.) Be sure you remember to include the option of declining to answer for each question - if you do not, your additional measures can not be included in prescreening. After creating your online survey, email the Research Participant Coordinator and request that your survey be added to the prescreening survey for the following quarter. Be sure to clearly identify the online survey that you want included. Only surveys that have already been created in the Experiment Management System can be included in prescreening - Quickdata surveys or other external web surveys can not be included.
Researchers should create their surveys for prescreening and contact the Research Participant Coordinator several weeks prior to the start of the quarter, if possible. If a request is received less than two weeks before the beginning of classes, it is unlikely that it can be included.
By default, only the standard demographic survey is carried over to the next quarter's prescreening. If you had a survey included in the previous quarter's prescreening and wish to have it included again this quarter, you must email the coordinator several weeks prior to the start of the quarter. Clearly identify the survey that you want carried over to the next prescreening so that the coordinator knows which section of the prescreening to re-use.
Be sure to download the prescreening data that you need for your research before the quarter ends. At the end of each quarter, all prescreening data is deleted from the system in preparation for the next quarter's prescreening session.
Eligibility
Use of the Intro Psych Subject Pool for data collection is restricted to DePaul Psychology Department faculty, and students working under their supervision.
Recruiting Policy
Direct recruiting of research participants in Intro Psych classes is strictly prohibited. Researchers may not announce their study in class, through emails, handouts, flyers, etc. ALL participant recruiting of Intro Psych students must be done through the online Research Participation System, and no credit, extra credit, or payments may be made to Intro Psych students for research participation except as administered through the Research Participation Pool system.
Contact
For administrative and operational requests and questions, contact the Research Participant Coordinator at experiments@davidallbritton.com
For questions about Subject Pool policies, contact the Research Participation Pool Manager, David Allbritton.
Updated May 9, 2007
