10 Behavioral Experiments That Went Terribly Wrong

TopTenz
18 Apr 201916:36

Summary

TLDRThis video delves into some of the most shocking and ethically dubious psychological experiments in history. From the self-destructive society of mice in Universe 25 to the CIA's mind control experiments in Operation Midnight Climax, these studies reveal the disturbing extremes researchers have gone to in the name of science. It explores the harmful impacts of manipulating human and animal subjects, including forced emotional reactions, drug overdoses, and the creation of fascist movements. The video highlights the profound moral failures and devastating consequences that arose from these notorious experiments.

Takeaways

  • 😀 Behavioral experiments are essential to scientific progress, but sometimes they go terribly wrong and lead to horrific outcomes.
  • 🐭 The Mouse Utopia experiment (Universe 25) revealed how overcrowding and a lack of social and reproductive engagement led to a collapse of the rodent population.
  • 💥 Operation Midnight Climax was a secret CIA experiment where prostitutes lured men into brothels, where they were drugged and observed for mind control experiments.
  • 😟 The Facial Expressions Experiment (1924) involved coercing test subjects to experience pain, fear, and disgust by shocking them and forcing them to kill animals for research.
  • 🐘 The LSD Elephant experiment in 1962, where an elephant named Tusko was given an overdose of LSD, resulted in the animal's death due to improper dosages and a bizarre experimental approach.
  • 💊 The UCLA Schizophrenia Experiment (1989) studied schizophrenic patients by withdrawing their medication, leading to severe mental breakdowns, suicides, and public outrage.
  • 📞 The Hofling Hospital experiment showed how authority figures can easily manipulate individuals into breaking hospital rules, as 21 out of 22 nurses administered an overdose at a fake doctor's command.
  • 🩺 Sigmund Freud’s treatment of Emma Eckstein involved an unnecessary and dangerous nasal surgery, leading to a near-fatal infection caused by medical malpractice.
  • 🧠 The Stimoceiver experiment involved implanting brain chips into human and animal subjects to control emotions and behaviors, but the results were often unpredictable and unethical.
  • 😨 The Monster Study (1939) subjected orphans to negative reinforcement in an attempt to induce stuttering, causing lifelong psychological damage to the children involved.
  • ✋ The Third Wave experiment showed how easily people can be manipulated into conforming to fascist ideologies, highlighting the power of authority and groupthink in shaping behavior.

Q & A

  • What was the primary objective of John Calhoun's Mouse Utopia experiment?

    -The primary goal of John Calhoun's Mouse Utopia experiment was to create an ideal environment for mice to study their behavior in a perfect habitat, to see how they would thrive and reproduce under ideal conditions.

  • What went wrong in the Mouse Utopia experiment, and how did the mice's behavior change?

    -The experiment went wrong when the mouse population exploded, leading to overcrowding. As a result, the mice became apathetic, aggressive, and socially disordered. The 'Beautiful Ones', a class of detached, non-reproductive mice, emerged, while others became increasingly violent. The population ultimately collapsed as a result of these self-destructive behaviors.

  • How did the CIA's Operation Midnight Climax experiment test mind control?

    -Operation Midnight Climax involved setting up CIA-sponsored brothels in New York and San Francisco, where unwitting men were drugged with LSD. CIA agents observed their behaviors through two-way mirrors, attempting to learn how drugs could influence people and induce mind control.

  • What ethical concerns arose from the CIA's Operation Midnight Climax?

    -The main ethical concerns included the use of unwitting participants who were subjected to drugs and monitored without their consent, as well as the eventual exploitation and blackmail of individuals who were filmed under the influence of mind-altering substances.

  • What unusual methods did Carney Landis use in his facial expressions experiment?

    -Carney Landis used extreme and often traumatic methods to induce facial expressions, including shocking participants, making them interact with dead animals like frogs, and even forcing them to behead a live mouse in an effort to study emotional responses to fear, disgust, and pain.

  • What was the outcome of Carney Landis’s facial expressions experiment?

    -The experiment failed to provide meaningful insights, revealing only that people express emotions in various ways. The traumatic methods, including animal killings, were ultimately deemed unnecessary and unethical.

  • Why did the LSD elephant experiment conducted by Dr. Louis Jolyon West end tragically?

    -The experiment tragically ended when Tusko, the elephant, was overdosed with an extremely high dose of LSD. The dose was over 30 times what a human would safely receive, which caused Tusko to suffer violent convulsions and eventually die despite further attempts to counteract the overdose.

  • What was the controversy surrounding the UCLA schizophrenia experiment?

    -The controversy arose when UCLA researchers removed schizophrenic patients from their medication to study their response. This led to disastrous outcomes, with patients experiencing severe mental health breakdowns, including violent behavior and suicide. The study raised significant ethical concerns regarding informed consent and patient care.

  • What did the Hofling hospital experiment reveal about obedience to authority?

    -The Hofling hospital experiment showed that most nurses would blindly follow orders from an authority figure, even when the instructions were clearly against hospital protocol. 21 out of 22 nurses administered a dangerous drug overdose to a patient after receiving instructions from a fake doctor, highlighting the dangers of obedience without questioning authority.

  • How did Sigmund Freud’s treatment of Emma Eckstein violate medical ethics?

    -Sigmund Freud’s treatment of Emma Eckstein violated medical ethics when he ignored her actual medical condition and instead subjected her to an unnecessary and risky nasal surgery. This led to severe complications, including a massive infection caused by a piece of gauze left inside her nose during the operation.

  • What were the ethical implications of Dr. Jose Manuel Rodriguez Delgado's stimoceiver experiments?

    -The ethical implications of Delgado's stimoceiver experiments were significant because the technology involved manipulating human emotions and behavior through brain implants. While the subjects consented, the unpredictable results and the invasive nature of the procedure raised serious questions about the morality of manipulating the human brain for experimental purposes.

  • What was the lasting impact of the 'Monster Study' conducted by Dr. Wendell Johnson?

    -The lasting impact of the 'Monster Study' was profound, as it caused long-term psychological harm to the children involved. The experiment aimed to induce stuttering through negative reinforcement, leading to lifelong emotional and developmental issues for many of the orphans who participated.

  • How did the Third Wave experiment demonstrate the ease with which people can be manipulated?

    -The Third Wave experiment showed how easily individuals can be influenced by authority figures and ideologies. A teacher created a fascist-like movement within his classroom, and the students quickly conformed to his strict rules and social control, illustrating how susceptible people can be to authoritarianism and groupthink.

  • What did Ron Jones, the teacher behind the Third Wave experiment, learn about the dangers of groupthink?

    -Ron Jones learned that even high school students, when placed under the influence of a charismatic leader and strict social rules, could easily fall into a mindset of conformity and oppression. The experiment demonstrated how groupthink and obedience to authority can rapidly lead to dangerous, dehumanizing behavior.

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Related Tags
Psychology ExperimentsUnethical ResearchControversial StudiesAnimal TestingCIA ExperimentsBehavioral ScienceMind ControlLSD ExperimentsPsychological HarmEthical ViolationsDark History