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Ethical Research Considerations

Product Design and Technologies
StudyPulse

Ethical Research Considerations

Product Design and Technologies
01 May 2026

Ethical Considerations in Research and Market Investigation

Research Types

Quantitative research produces numerical data:
- Surveys with Likert scales, ratings, or yes/no responses
- Measurements, counts, test results
- Analysed statistically to find patterns across a sample

Qualitative research produces descriptive data:
- Interviews, focus groups, observation notes, open-ended survey responses
- Analysed thematically to understand meanings, contexts, and perspectives
- Rich in nuance; harder to generalise

Both types are used in PDT design research. Strong research programs combine both.

Ethical Considerations in Research

Informed consent
- Participants must understand what the research involves, how data will be used, and that participation is voluntary
- For minors: parental consent required
- Consent should be documented

Confidentiality and anonymity
- Personal identifying information should not be shared without consent
- Research reports should anonymise participants unless they have given explicit permission to be named

Avoiding harm
- Research should not expose participants to physical, psychological, or social harm
- Sensitive topics (disability, body image, cultural identity) require careful framing and debriefing options

Honest representation
- Do not cherry-pick data that supports a predetermined conclusion
- Report negative findings and limitations
- Do not fabricate or alter data

Cultural sensitivity
- Research with Indigenous or culturally specific communities requires respectful engagement, ideally in partnership with community members
- Be aware of power dynamics: researchers hold more formal authority than community participants

Intellectual property
- Acknowledge sources of secondary research accurately
- Do not reproduce copyrighted images, text, or designs without permission
- Be aware of design patents and trademarks when researching existing products

Methods to Investigate Market Needs or Opportunities

Primary (direct) methods:
- Online surveys (Google Forms, SurveyMonkey): fast, scalable, anonymous; good for quantitative data
- Semi-structured interviews (in person or via video): rich qualitative data; requires skill in questioning
- Observation: watch how people interact with existing products in natural contexts
- Focus groups: group discussion to generate multiple perspectives simultaneously
- User diaries: participants record their experience with a product over time

Secondary (existing data) methods:
- Market research reports (IBISWorld, Roy Morgan)
- Social media trend analysis (hashtags, product reviews, sentiment analysis)
- Academic journals and design publications
- Government data (ABS: demographic, economic, environmental statistics)
- Competitor product analysis (teardowns, feature comparisons)

Digital technologies in research:
- Social listening tools (monitor online conversations about a product category)
- Online trend analysis (Google Trends, Pinterest search data)
- 3D scanning of existing products for form analysis
- Eye-tracking and heat-map software for UX research
- Digital survey platforms with branching logic and data visualisation

KEY TAKEAWAY: Ethical research requires informed consent, honest representation, confidentiality, and cultural sensitivity. Research is not just a data-gathering exercise — it carries responsibility for participants and communities.

EXAM TIP: When describing research methods, always include the ethical consideration relevant to that method (e.g. ‘online survey — participants are anonymous and participation is voluntary’) — this demonstrates depth.

COMMON MISTAKE: Students describe research methods without addressing ethics. VCAA explicitly requires ethical considerations to be included.

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