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What is Research?
Will G Hopkins Sport and Recreation AUT University Auckland NZ
How to do Research: solve a problem, publish Dissecting the Dimensions of Research: topic, novelty, technology, scope, mode, methods, ideology, politics, utility Reassembling the Dimensions: quantitative vs qualitative research
How to do Research
Research is all about addressing an issue or asking and answering a question or solving a problem, so Identify an issue, question, or problem. Find out what's already known about it.
Talk with experts and/or read their reviews and the original research on the topic.
Plan, cost, and do your study accordingly. Write it up and submit it for assessment.
Better still, do a good job on it and submit it for publication. Undergrad projects are sometimes good enough to publish. Your work will benefit more people if you
My understanding of the various kinds of research advanced when I identified various dimensions (components) of research.
A former colleague regarded such analysis as a trivial pursuit. If you find a better way to understand research, let me know. Meanwhile consider these dimensions: topic: physicalbiologicalpsychological sociological novelty: create new vs review published data or info technology: develop new vs use existing methods Click to link to each dimensio scope: study a single case vs a sample Click here for Conclusion
Examples
Clinical: the effect of a herb on performance. Psychological: factors affecting work-place satisfaction. Behavioral: how can we reduce truancy at this school? Economic: characterize the productivity of new immigrants. Social: develop risk-management procedures at a gym.
You use other researchers' published data or info about a phenomenon. A quantitative statistical review is called a meta-analysis. You should "earn your spurs" doing original
Sometimes a legitimate topic for study is methodological. For example, development or novel investigation of
a measuring device a psychometric instrument (questionnaire or inventory) a protocol for a physical performance test a diagnostic test a method of analysis.
Are you solving a single case of something, or is it a sample that will allow you to generalize to a population? In a case study
You are interested in "what happened or will happen here". Your finding applies only locally: to the case you studied. The quest for an answer can be like that in a court case. Qualitative methods are often required. You reach an answer by applying logic (=
In a study of a sample
You are interested in "what happens in general". Rarely, "what" is simply descriptive: the frequency, mean value or other simple statistic of something in the sample. Most often, the "what" is the value of an effect statistic: the relationship between the thing of interest (a dependent variable, such as health, performance) and something else (a predictor variable, such as training, gender, diet) in the sample. Examples of effect statistics: difference or change in a mean value; ratio of frequencies (relative risk); correlation coefficient. You control for other possible predictor variables either by holding them constant or
You study a sample, because it is impractical and wasteful (and therefore unethical) to study a population. What happens in general" refers to the average person or situation in a population represented by your sample. "Population" is a defined group, not the entire human race or all possible situations. You make inferences about that population; that is, you generalize from the sample to a population. You can make inferences to other populations only if you can argue that those populations are similar to your sample with respect to the effect you have studied.
There are several ways to generalize from sample to population Old: develop a null hypothesis about a relationship, then test the hypothesis (that is, try to falsify it) using statistical significance based on something called the P value. New: identify a relationship, measure its magnitude, state the uncertainty in the true value using confidence limits, then make a conclusion about its clinical or practical importance in the population. Sample size is a big issue. The smaller the sample, the more the uncertainty. A stronger relationship needs less certainty. So a stronger relationship needs a smaller
In an observational study
The aim is to gather data or information about the world as it is. So you hope the act of studying doesn't substantially modify the thing you are interested in. You do something to the world and see what happens. You gather data or information almost always
In an interventionist study
The following comments refer to observational and interventionist studies with samples. The estimate of the magnitude of a relationship is less likely to be biased (that is, not the same as in a population) if
the sample is selected randomly from the population, and you have a high compliance (low proportion of dropouts).
usually establishes only an association between variables rather than a causal relationship; needs hundreds or even thousands of subjects
Case series, e.g. 20 gold medallists. Cross-sectional (correlational), e.g. a sample of 1000 athletes. Case-control (retrospective), e.g. 200 Olympians and 800 non-Olympians. Cohort (prospective or longitudinal), e.g. measure characteristics of 1000 athletes then determine incidence of Olympic medals after 10 years. You can establish causality: X really does affect Y. You may need only scores of subjects for accurate generalization about trivial or small
Subjects are randomly assigned to treatments. Assignment is balanced in respect of any characteristics that might affect the outcome. In other words, you want treatment groups to be similar. Subjects and researchers are blind to the identity of the active and control (placebo) treatments. Single blind = subjects don't know which is which. Double blind = the researchers administering the treatments and doing the measurements and analysis don't know either.
You gather data with an instrument, such as a stopwatch, a blood test, a video analysis package, or a structured questionnaire. You derive measures or variables from the data, then investigate relationships among the variables. Some people think you have to do it by testing hypotheses. Error of measurement is an important issue. Almost all measures have noise or other errors. Errors affect the relationship between
You gather information or themes from texts, conversations or loosely structured interviews, then tell a coherent story. Software such as NVivo can help. The open-ended nature of these methods allows for more flexibility and serendipity in identifying factors and practical strategies than the formal structured quantitative approach. The direction of the research may change mid-stream. Formal procedures enhance trustworthiness of the information. Triangulationaim for congruence of info from various sources. Member checking or respondent validationthe subjects check the
A paradigm sometimes has religious status for its adherents: thou shalt not question it! We make and share observations, identify problems and solve them without disagreement about the nature of meaning or reality.
Positivist or objective
Post-structuralist
The researcher views people as subjects of discourses (interrelated systems of unstable social meanings). Although the subjectivity of research is emphasized, the researchers attempt to achieve objectivity. Do they succeed? Many people find post-structuralist papers hard to understand. Alan Sokal, a physicist, wrote a nonsensical paperTransgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravityand got it accepted by the journal Social Text. Part of the truth of a situation can be found in
Interpretivist
Most researchers aim to be politically neutral or impartial by presenting all sides of an argument. Sometimes the researcher is overtly partisan or adversarial.
In social science such research is known as critical or radical. The researcher attempts to raise understanding about oppression and to facilitate collective action against it. Some commentators regard critical research as a specific paradigm in social science, but
In pure, basic, theoretical or academic projects, the aim is to understand the cause or mechanism of a phenomenon. Applied or practical projects impact directly on health, wealth, or culture (art, recreation), or on development of a method. Even so, try to include mechanisms in an applied project.
It will help you publish in a high-impact journal, because their editors and reviewers can be snooty about pure research.
These often go These often go together as together as This pigeonholing doesnt apply toresearch. quantitative qualitative the research. novelty, technology and utility dimensions.
Some regions are less popular, but worth visiting. For example:
Action research is a subjective intervention with a case or sample. Dealing with the problems of everyday life is an informal kind of action research. Some researchers identify the extreme subjects in a quantitative survey, then interview them subjectively/qualitatively as cases. Others do a qualitative pilot study of a few cases to identify a problem and the appropriate measures for a larger quantitative study of a sample.
Qualitative methods applied to a sample often result in a small sample size because subjects are hard to get, or the interviews are too time consuming, or the researchers dislike the idea of large samples. But a study with a small sample can adequately characterize only strong associations (large effects) in a population. So these small-scale qualitative studies are not definitive for a small or trivial effect. Furthermore, open-ended inquiry is equivalent to assaying many variables, so there is a high risk of finding a spurious association. If the sample is small, the spurious association will be strong.
In Conclusion
A given research project can be characterized by topic, novelty, technology, scope, mode, methods, ideology, politics and utility. This dimensional view may help you sort out a good approach to a specific project, but
I may have missed or mangled some dimensions. There may be better ways to understand research.
Your work needs to be credible to some people and preferably also published if its to have any impact.