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Benjamin Rohr; John Levi Martin – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
It is common for social scientists to use formal quantitative methods to compare ecological units such as towns, schools, or nations. In many cases, the size of these units in terms of the number of individuals subsumed in each differs substantially. When the variables in question are counts, there is generally some attempt to neutralize…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Population Distribution, Ecology, Demography
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Anna-Carolina Haensch; Jonathan Bartlett; Bernd Weiß – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
Discrete-time survival analysis (DTSA) models are a popular way of modeling events in the social sciences. However, the analysis of discrete-time survival data is challenged by missing data in one or more covariates. Negative consequences of missing covariate data include efficiency losses and possible bias. A popular approach to circumventing…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Research Problems, Social Science Research, Statistical Analysis
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Sonika Jha; Anil Kumar Singh; Rajneesh Chauhan – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Research is about an individual's intellectual acumen and rationality, and inter-researcher collaboration capability magnifies the outcomes. Despite common belief, there exist fundamental asymmetries in the goals, orientations and expectations among the research collaborators. Seldom studied in-depth and empirically validated, the challenges and…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Research Methodology, Researchers, Research Design
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Welzel, Christian; Brunkert, Lennart; Kruse, Stefan; Inglehart, Ronald F. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
Scholars study representative international surveys to understand cross-cultural differences in mentality patterns, which are measured via complex multi-item constructs. Methodologists in this field insist with increasing vigor that detecting "non-invariance" in how a construct's items associate with each other in different national…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Social Science Research, Factor Analysis, Measurement Techniques
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Tong, Guangyu; Guo, Guang – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
Meta-analysis is a statistical method that combines quantitative findings from previous studies. It has been increasingly used to obtain more credible results in a wide range of scientific fields. Combining the results of relevant studies allows researchers to leverage study similarities while modeling potential sources of between-study…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Social Science Research, Regression (Statistics), Statistical Bias
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Demarest, Leila; Langer, Arnim – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
While conflict event data sets are increasingly used in contemporary conflict research, important concerns persist regarding the quality of the collected data. Such concerns are not necessarily new. Yet, because the methodological debate and evidence on potential errors remains scattered across different subdisciplines of social sciences, there is…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Research Methodology, Conflict, Social Science Research
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Borgstrom, Erica; Ellis, Julie – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2021
Research about dying is viewed as inherently sensitive because of how death is perceived in many societies. Such framing assumes participants are 'vulnerable' and at risk of 'harm' from research. Simultaneously, with increasing recognition of the importance of reflexivity, researchers can become (deeply) preoccupied with their actions and…
Descriptors: Death, Social Science Research, Researchers, Reflection
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Abraham R. Matamanda – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Urban planning research usually requires researchers to undertake fieldwork. This fieldwork is frustrated or enabled by gatekeepers who can influence effective data collection. Traditionally, gatekeepers are perceived as monolithic, neutral, and static individuals, yet they are complex individuals with varying needs and expectations from the…
Descriptors: Politics, Urban Planning, Land Settlement, Social Science Research
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Leszczensky, Lars; Wolbring, Tobias – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
Does "X" affect "Y"? Answering this question is particularly difficult if reverse causality is looming. Many social scientists turn to panel data to address such questions of causal ordering. Yet even in longitudinal analyses, reverse causality threatens causal inference based on conventional panel models. Whereas the…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Causal Models, Comparative Analysis, Statistical Bias
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Møller, Jørgen; Skaaning, Svend-Erik – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
The historical turn in social science has prompted scholars to engage with the work of historians on a large scale. Here, social scientists face two standard problems of selection bias: confirmation bias and convenience sampling. So far, the record of dealing with these problems has been poor, and little has been done to specify how social…
Descriptors: Historians, Bias, Sampling, Research Problems
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Gorard, Stephen – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2020
Social science datasets usually have missing cases, and missing values. All such missing data has the potential to bias future research findings. However, many research reports ignore the issue of missing data, only consider some aspects of it, or do not report how it is handled. This paper rehearses the damage caused by missing data. The paper…
Descriptors: Data, Research Problems, Social Science Research, Statistical Analysis
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Kenneth A. Frank; Qinyun Lin; Spiro J. Maroulis – Grantee Submission, 2024
In the complex world of educational policy, causal inferences will be debated. As we review non-experimental designs in educational policy, we focus on how to clarify and focus the terms of debate. We begin by presenting the potential outcomes/counterfactual framework and then describe approximations to the counterfactual generated from the…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Statistical Inference, Observation, Educational Policy
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Damian, Elena; Meuleman, Bart; van Oorschot, Wim – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
In this article, we examine whether cross-national studies disclose enough information for independent researchers to evaluate the validity and reliability of the findings (evaluation transparency) or to perform a direct replication (replicability transparency). The first contribution is theoretical. We develop a heuristic theoretical model…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Cross Cultural Studies, Social Science Research, Periodicals
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Piotr Jabkowski – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Social research methodologists have postulated that the transparency of survey procedures and data processing is mandatory for assessing the Total Survey Error. Recent analyses of data from cross-national surveys have demonstrated an increase in the quality of documentation reports over time and significant differences in documentation quality…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Cross Cultural Studies, Documentation, Error Patterns
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Steven J. Pentland; Christie M. Fuller; Lee A. Spitzley; Douglas P. Twitchell – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
The analysis of spoken language has been integral to a breadth of research in social science and beyond. However, for analyses to occur with efficiency, language must be in the form of computer-readable text. Historically, the speech-to-text process has occurred manually using human transcriptionists. Automated speech recognition (ASR) is…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Social Science Research, Classification, Reading Processes
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