Ethical considerations for sleep intervention in organizational psychology research.

Larissa K Barber
Author Information
  1. Larissa K Barber: Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA. ORCID

Abstract

Over the past several years, interest into the role of sleep in the workplace has grown. The theoretical shift from research questions examining sleep as an outcome to placing sleep as the independent variable has increased experimental approaches to manipulating sleep in organizational studies. This is an exciting trend that is likely to continue in the organizational sciences. However, sleep experimentation can also pose special challenges for organizational researchers unaccustomed to sleep science. In this commentary, I discuss five ethical considerations of conducting negative sleep interventions in organizational psychology research. I also provide recommendations for organizational researchers-or even other researchers in disciplines outside of sleep science-who wish to implement sleep interventions in their studies.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Behavior Therapy
Behavioral Research
Health Education
Humans
Occupational Health
Psychology, Industrial
Sleep

Word Cloud

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