Overview Research in geography Types of geographic research questions Quantitative versus qualitative research approaches Using GIS for research in geography.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Robert Gordon University School of Engineering Dr. Mohamed Amish
Advertisements

Research Methods in Crime and Justice
Research methods – Deductive / quantitative
4.11 PowerPoint Emily Smith.
Research Methodologies
Analytical methods for Information Systems Professionals
Qualitative Methods Lisa Harrison: Chapter 5. Qualitative and Quantitative (74) Quantitative: Focuses on the analysis of numerical data (statistics, polling),
Qualitative Research. Comparing Qualitative and Quantitative Methods Before discussing the differences between qualitative and quantitative methodologies.
Methodology A preview. What is Methodology  Choosing a method of data collection  Structure of the research  Builds on and draws from problem statement.
Problem Identification
Lecture 2 Research Questions: Defining and Justifying Problems; Defining Hypotheses.
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Outline: Research Methodology: Case Study - what is case study
Formulating the research design
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches Dr. William M. Bauer
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Alain Bertaud Urbanist Module 2: Spatial Analysis and Urban Land Planning The Spatial Structure of Cities: International Examples of the Interaction of.
Introduction to Theory & Research Design
Research method2 Dr Majed El- Farra 1 Research methods Second meeting.
Chapter 10 Conducting & Reading Research Baumgartner et al Chapter 10 Qualitative Research.
Quantitative and Qualitative Research. Theory vs. Hypothesis From last class… Good research is informed by theory, or “a unified explanation for discrete.
SIMAD University Research Process Ali Yassin Sheikh.
Marketing Research: Overview
WP2 Quality of Life Indicators Charles University of Prague Ludek Sykora.
Research Methods in Computer Science Lecture: Quantitative and Qualitative Data Analysis | Department of Science | Interactive Graphics System.
Qualitative Analysis Information Studies Division Research Workshop Elisabeth Logan.
RESEARCH IN MATH EDUCATION-3
Research Methods in Education
© 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Chapter 2 Sociological Investigation.
Copyright © 2011 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 8 Qualitative Inquiry.
Types of Research (Quantitative and Qualitative) RCS /11/05.
Role of Statistics in Geography
Introduction to Research
The Literature Search and Background of the Problem.
HOW TO WRITE RESEARCH PROPOSAL BY DR. NIK MAHERAN NIK MUHAMMAD.
Qualitative versus Quantitative Research (Source: W.G. Zikmund, “Business Research Methods,” 7th Edition, US, Thomson, South-Western, 2003)
Experimental Research Methods in Language Learning Chapter 1 Introduction and Overview.
Hypothesis & Research Questions Understanding Differences between qualitative and quantitative approaches.
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Conducting and Reading Research in Health and Human Performance.
Lecture 02.
Qualitative Research Design
The Practical Aspects of Doing Research An Giang University June, 2004 Dennis Berg, Ph.D.
EDU 5900 AB. RAHIM BAKAR 1 Research Methods in Education.
Week 2 The lecture for this week is designed to provide students with a general overview of 1) quantitative/qualitative research strategies and 2) 21st.
Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methods
Ch 10 Methodology.
Week 3 Qualitative Approaches to Field Research GEOG 4520B 3.0 Research Design and Field Studies Department of Geography Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional.
Research for Nurses: Methods and Interpretation Chapter 1 What is research? What is nursing research? What are the goals of Nursing research?
Quantitative Research Qualitative Research? A type of educational research in which the researcher decides what to study. A type of educational research.
Research methods 16 th January Research methods Important to have a clear focus for your research. Hypothesis Question Grounded data.
Research Designs/Approaches
Formulating the Research Design
Research Methodology II Term review. Theoretical framework  What is meant by a theory? It is a set of interrelated constructs, definitions and propositions.
QUANTITATIVE METHODS I203 Social and Organizational Issues of Information For Fun and Profit.
WHY IS THIS HAPPENING IN THE PROGRAM? Session 5 Options for Further Investigation & Information Flow.
Sociology. Sociology is a science because it uses the same techniques as other sciences Explaining social phenomena is what sociological theory is all.
What is Research Design? RD is the general plan of how you will answer your research question(s) The plan should state clearly the following issues: The.
Research Philosophies, Approaches and Strategies Levent Altinay.
Criminal Justice and Criminology Research Methods, Second Edition Kraska / Neuman © 2012 by Pearson Higher Education, Inc Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.
Overview Research in geography Types of geographic research questions
DATA COLLECTION METHODS IN NURSING RESEARCH
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH Provides descriptions of the basic nature or the characteristics of the phenomenon. Qualitative designs emphasize understanding.
Qualitative research: an overview
Intro to Research Methods
Research & Writing in CJ
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches Dr. William M. Bauer
Features of a Good Research Study
Quantitative vs Qualitative Research
Presentation transcript:

Overview Research in geography Types of geographic research questions Quantitative versus qualitative research approaches Using GIS for research in geography

Why do we do research in geography?

Research for exploration Investigation of little-understood phenomena Identification of important variables Generation of questions for further research

Research for description To describe and characterize patterns and phenomena To document patterns and phenomena of interest

Research for explanation and understanding To explain what caused an observed pattern or phenomena To explain why a pattern or phenomena is characterized the way it is To understand processes and interactions between people, places, and phenomena

Research for prediction To predict future patterns or outcomes for different phenomena To forecast events and behaviors resulting from different phenomena

Exploratory questions: learn about a new issue Descriptive questions: describe a phenomenon Explanatory questions: explain a phenomenon Predictive questions: predicting future patterns Research studies often include two or more types of research questions Types of research questions in geography

GIS can be used to answer all types of research questions: Exploratory: Is there a spatial pattern? Descriptive: Has the pattern changed over time? Explanatory: What caused a pattern to change? Predictive: What do we expect the pattern to look like in the future?

GIS can be applied in both quantitative and qualitative research studies

Quantitative research approaches Application of numerical analytical techniques to address geographic research questions (of all types) Defined as the collection, classification, presentation, and analysis of numerical data

Qualitative research approaches Use non-numerical information (e.g. conversations, artifacts, visual images) Entails a wide range of approaches such as unstructured interviews, ethnography, content analysis Shared belief in grounded theory (generate theory from information that the researcher collects)

All quantitative analysis is based on qualitative judgements (e.g. quantitative survey of quality of life in Oslo) Did the respondent understand the question? Did the respondent understand your answer scheme (e.g. 1 = agree; 2 = disagree) ? Did the respondent realize the questions were only about living in Oslo? Was the respondent answering honestly or just randomly?

All qualitative data can be measured and coded using quantitative methods (e.g. unstructured interviews about quality of life in Oslo Code responses in an open-ended interview with numbers that refer to data specific references For example, code the factors that people see as reflecting high quality of life (e.g., bars, skiing) Quantitative research can therefore be generated from qualitative inquiries.

What’s the real difference between research approaches? The major difference between qualitative and quantitative research stems from the researcher’s underlying strategies. Quantitative research is viewed as confirmatory and deductive in nature (use data to test theories) Qualitative research is considered to be exploratory and inductive (gather the data and learn what’s happening from the data and then generate theories)

Questions to consider for qualitative versus quantifative research Is your aim the generation of new theories or hypothesis? Do you need to obtain a deep understanding of an issue? Is the issue too complex to quantify? (what does it mean to be poor in Oslo today?) Are you willing to trade detail for generalizability? (e.g., someone’s experience of poverty vs. a quantifiable measure of income levels)

GIS is a tool for all types of research questions and research approaches GIS and quantitative, descriptive analysis GIS and quantitative, explanatory analysis GIS and qualitative, descriptive analysis GIS and qualitative exploratory analysis

GIS and Quantitative Analysis: Vulnerability to climate change and economic changes in Indian agriculture

Context Agriculture in India –27 % GDP –700 million people –more than 60 % is rainfed cultivation Both climate change and economic globalization are ongoing processes with uneven impacts. Indian agriculture will be confronted by both processes simultaneously, leading to changing patterns of vulnerability.

Main objectives Assess vulnerability of agriculture to climate change in the context of economic changes Use GIS to identify highly vulnerable areas and social groups Interview farmers in highly vulnerable areas to understand how farmers are coping with climatic and economic changes

Methodology GIS-based vulnerability profile Village-level case studies Integration of macro- and micro- scale analyses

Globalization vulnerability

Climate Change Vulnerability

Double Exposure: Areas that are Vulnerable to both Climate Change and Globalization

Case study approach Questionnaire-based survey –Economic status –Agricultural practices –Coping mechanisms –Access to facilities (electricity, irrigation, health, education, loans, etc) Participatory rural appraisals Focus group discussions with small and marginal farmers One-to-one meetings with village heads and district administrative officers

GIS and Quantitative Methods GIS can also be combined with statistical techniques such as correlation and regression Correlation: are observations correlated across space (e.g. do high income counties cluster together) Regression analysis: incorporate correlation across space into a spatial regression model

GIS and Quantitative Explanatory Analysis: Accounting for Income Variation on American Indian Tribal Areas

Rural Poverty and Tribal Areas Persistent poverty is an enduring problem for rural areas In the US, persistent rural poverty is especially evident on tribal lands Tribal lands also tend to be located in very “marginal places” Cross-sectional economic and geographic literature has paid relatively little attention to tribal areas (despite many case studies)

Research Questions 1. Are there significant differences in per capita income levels between tribal and non-tribal areas, after controlling for locational and other characteristics? 2. Across tribal spatial areas, what accounts for income level variation?

What might explain variation in spatial income levels? Locational factors: proximity to urban areas, cost of living, natural amenities, transport infrastructure Structural factors: industry structure (shares in manufacturing, agriculture/resources, federal gov) unemployment rate Individual factors: educational attainment, age- structure of the population Tribal and social capital: AI population share, presence collective economic activity (gaming), type of tribal area (presence of tribal land base)

Key Findings Locational, Structural and Individual factors all matter in accounting for income variation across all county groupings, including all tribal types of tribal counties Consistent factors include market size, unemployment, educational attainment, and shares of retirement-age population

Key Findings Tribal counties do not have significantly different income levels than other counties (once locational and other factors are controlled) But, tribal and nontribal counties with high shares of American Indians do have significantly lower incomes than other counties (even controlling for other factors)

GIS and Qualitiative Methods GIS has historically been applied primarily to quantitative questions Newest frontier in GIS research entails use of GIS in qualitative research

Marianna Pavlovskaya, Professor of Geography (CUNY-Hunter) 2002 "Mapping urban change and changing GIS: Other views of economic restructuring," forthcoming in Gender, Place and Culture.

Research Questions How did the end of communism affect people’s everyday lives? How did their participation in the economy change (changes in the nature of work)? How did their access to consumer goods changes?

Mei-Po Kwan, Professor of Geography (Ohio State University) Evaluating Gender Differences in Individual Accessibility: A Study Using Trip Data Collected by the Global Positioning System

Research Questions How do typical daily travel patterns vary between men and women? What do these variations imply about employment opportunities and leisure time activities?

Summary GIS can be used to answer all types of research questions, including exploratory, descriptive and an explanatory questions GIS applies to both quantitative and qualitative work The choice of GIS techniques depends on the type of research questions that you are asking The research questions should always come first