Title: Geography 237 Geographic Research: Methods and Issues
1Geography 237Geographic Research Methods and
Issues
- Research Design
- (Babbie, Chapter 4)
- Problems and Questions
- Purpose(s) of Research
- Causal Explanations
- Units of Analysis
2Research Problem
- "The formulation of a problem is often more
essential than its solution"! (Einstein) - quite general
- form of a statement
- e.g., Worldwide, millions of children die each
year from diarrhea. - e.g., Some people recycle more than others.
- e.g., People smoke, despite general scientific
agreement that smoking has serious negative
health effects. - e.g., The trucking industry has deregulated.
3Research Questions
- more specific
- some conceptual distinction
- form of a question
- e.g., Why do children in Grenada not receive
simple, relatively cheap, treatments for
diarrhea? - e.g., Do smokers know about the negative health
effects of smoking? Do they believe what most
scientists believe about negative health effects?
If so, why do they still smoke? - e.g., What are the impacts of trucking
deregulation on large, medium and small trucking
companies?
4Exercise
- Out line a social research problem and some
research questions to accompany it. - State some specific hypotheses.
- e.g. the internet
- e.g. hurricanes
- e.g. other
5Three Purposes of Research
- 1) Exploration
- topic new to researcher
- new topic entirely
- often idiographic explanations
- often qualitative
- often lack representativeness (see sampling)
- e.g., How do people perceive the risks from
genetically modified foods?
6Three Purposes of Research
- 2) Description
- patterns of phenomena
- precise sampling and observation
- often quantitative
- little or no explanation of patterns
- what?, where?, when? and how?
- e.g., census
- e.g., How widespread are genetically modified
foods?
7Three Purposes of Research
- 3) Explanation
- why?
- nomothetic or idiographic explanations
- e.g., Why do experts and laypeople seem to
disagree on the risks posed by genetically
modified foods?
8Nomothetic Causal Explanation(in the
probabilistic sense)
- Does A cause B?
- E.g., Does drug addiction cause crime?
9Three Conditions forNomothetic Causal Explanation
- Correlation
- A is associated with B
- Drug users are often convicted of theft.
- Time Order
- A precedes B
- The thieves were drug users before they became
thieves. - Nonspuriousness
- C does not cause A and B
- The drug user thieves are also very poor i.e.,
being poor correlates with both.
10Spurious Relationship
11Unfair Criticisms of Nomothetic Causality
- Complete causation
- A is not the only cause of B
- Exceptional Cases
- B does not always occur when A happens
- Majority of Cases
- majority of A are not B
- more likely is all that matters
12Types of Causal Variables
- Necessary
- A must be present for B to happen
- e.g., Geog 237 needed for Geog degree
- e.g., female to get pregnant
13Necessary Cause
14Types of Causal Variables
- Sufficient
- B happens in presence of A
- other As may also be sufficient
- e.g., 82 gets you into grad school
- best explanatory variables are both
- often explanatory variables are neither (e.g.,
drug use and crime)
15Sufficient Cause
16Units of Analysis
- The level at which you want to make
generalizations. - individuals
- e.g., students, Canadians, hispanics
- groups
- e.g., families, households, census tracts
- organizations
- e.g., universities, banks
- social artifacts
- e.g., music, grades
- usually unit individuals
17Units of Analysis
18Units of Analysis
10 households 12 families 4/12 33 2/10 20
19Units of Analysis Exercise
- What is the unit of analysis (see review chapter
4)? - This paper examines variation in job title
structures across work roles. Analyzing 3,173
job titles in the California civil service system
in 1985 we investigate how and why lines of work
vary in the proliferation of job categories that
differentiate ranks, functions, or particular
organizational locations (Strang and Baron 1990
479)
20Units of Analysis Exercise
- What is the unit of analysis (see review chapter
4)? - Women watch tv more than men because they are
likely to work fewer hours outside the home than
men....Black people watch an average of
approximately three-quarters of an hour more
television per day than white people (Hughes
1980 290)
21Units of Analysis Exercise
- What is the unit of analysis (see review chapter
4)? - Of the 130 incorporated UW cities with more than
100,000 inhabitants in 1960, 126 had at least two
short-term nonproprietary general hospitals
accredited by the American Hospital Association.
(Turk 1980 317)
22Dangers With Units of Analysis
- Ecological Fallacy
- Drawing conclusions about individuals from
studies done on groups - E.g., census tracts
- Reductionism
- Explaining complex phenomena using a single,
narrow set of concepts - E.g., sociologists vs geographers
- But what about parsimony?
23Temporal Considerations in Research Design
- Cross-sectional
- snapshot in time
- e.g., surveys
- Longitudinal
- observation at different points in time
- e.g., analysis of multiple censuses
- Longitudinal generally produce more convincing
findings!
24Longitudinal Designs
- Trend
- Changes within a population over time
- e.g., national censuses over time
- Cohort
- Follow specific subpopulations over time
- e.g. baby boomers.
- Panel
- Follow the exact same group over time
- e.g., 50 farmers from Oxford county
25Something seem amiss?
- The COMMIT study incorporated both cohort
- and cross-sectional designs. In the case of
attitude - measurement, cohorts of smokers and non-smokers
- identified in the 1988 baseline survey were
resurveyed - in 1989, 1991 and 1993 to determine their
- attitudes towards smoking before, during and
after - the intervention. In addition, a subset of
respondents - to the 1993 final prevalence survey was asked
- the same attitude questions. As a result, two
approaches to examining community-level changes - in attitudes were possible (1) the cohort
approach - involving the comparison of attitudes across the
- three points in time and (2) the cross-sectional
- approach comparing the 1989 cohort survey data
- with the 1993 final prevalence survey.
- (Taylor et al. 1998 111)
26Research Process
(Nomothetic) Research Process