This method involves research participants listing what they know or think about the researcher's topic. This book incorporates free-list analyses with other analytical methods and demonstrates their broad applicability. The book starts with descriptive methods, then outlines a predictive statistical framework. The author explains how to collect, clean, and manage free-list data and how to use R to calculate and visualize them.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
An innovative research methods book that provides a step-by-step guide to the popular R software. Researchers of any social scientific discipline will benefit tremendously from procedural knowledge in transforming conventionally qualitative data into quantitative reasoning. -- Kenneth C. C. Yang
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Sage Publications Inc Ebooks
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Maße
Höhe: 212 mm
Breite: 136 mm
Dicke: 12 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-0719-1842-5 (9781071918425)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Benjamin Grant Purzycki is Associate Professor at Aarhus University's Department of the Study of Religion. A cognitive and evolutionary anthropologist by training, he merges experimental and ethnographic methods together to make better sense of religious systems' utility for human adaptation. He has conducted fieldwork in the Tyva Republic (Russia) and managed large cross-cultural projects. He co-developed AnthroTools (with Alastair Jamieson-Lane), a software package for analyzing ethnographic data in R and has published in a wide range of journals including Current Anthropology, Cognition, Cognitive Science, Nature, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, and Psychological Methods. His books include Religion Evolving: Cultural, Cognitive, and Ecological Dynamics (with Richard Sosis, Equinox), The Minds of Gods: New Horizons in the Naturalistic Study of Religion (with Theiss Bendixen, Bloomsbury), the two-volume Evolution of Religion and Morality project (with Martin Lang, Joseph Henrich, and Ara Norenzayan, Routledge), and Morality and the Gods (Cambridge University Press).
Series Editor Introduction
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Chapter 1: Introduction
What Is a Free-List?
Why Free-List?
Getting to Work
Data Management
Chapter 2: Content Analysis
Background
Frequency Analysis
Salience Analysis
Salience Revisited
Further Methods in Content Analysis
Summary
Chapter 3: Structure Analysis
Examining Conceptual Relationships
Two Case Studies
Conceptual Networks
Further Methods in Structure Analysis
Chapter 4: Overlap and Sharedness
Conceptual Overlap Across Domains
Intragroup Sharing and Variation
Intergroup Sharing and Variation
Summary and Closing Note
Chapter 5: Models, Prediction, and Uncertainty
The Arithmetic Mean as a Model
Primer on Regression
Bayesian Regression
Chapter 6: Free-List Data in Regression
Thinking Through the System
Predicting List Lengths
Predicting Item Presence
Predicting Salience
Multilevel Models
Using Individual Free-Lists to Predict Behavior
Concluding Remarks
Chapter 7: Future Prospects
Culture, Text, and Content
Cognition, Culture, and Society
Culture Evolving
References
Index