Data sources and data collection methods

2021 ◽  
pp. 71-91
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Moore ◽  
Shannon Dailey ◽  
Hallie Garrison ◽  
Andrei Amatuni ◽  
Elika Bergelson

Around their first birthdays, infants begin to point, walk, and talk. These abilities are appreciable both by researchers with strictly standardized criteria and caregivers with more relaxed notions of what each of these skills entails. Here we compare the onsets of these skills and links among them across two data collection methods: observation and parental report. We examine pointing, walking, and talking in a sample of 44 infants studied longitudinally from 6–18 months. In this sample, links between pointing and vocabulary were tighter than those between walking and vocabulary, supporting a unified socio-communicative growth account. Indeed, across several cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, pointers had larger vocabularies than their non-pointing peers. In contrast to previous work, this did not hold for walkers’ vs. crawlers’ vocabularies in our sample. Comparing across data sources, we find that reported and observed estimates of the growing vocabulary and of age of walk onset were closely correlated, while agreement between parents and researchers on pointing onset and talking onset was weaker. Taken together, these results support a developmental account in which gesture and language are intertwined aspects of early communication and symbolic thinking, whereas the shift from crawling to walking appears indistinct from age in its relation with language. We conclude that pointing, walking, and talking are on similar timelines yet distinct from one another, and discuss methodological and theoretical implications in the context of early development.


Al-Qalam ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 421
Author(s):  
Khaerun Nisa'

This study aims to determine the process of implementation the <em>parunrungi baju </em>and <em>attarasa’s </em>tradition in the Konjo community adult process, how is the existance of the <em>parunrungi baju </em>and <em>attarasa’s </em>tradition in the modern area, and how is the islamic perspective on the procession of tradition. The type of this research is qualitative descriptive research. Data sources are primary and secondary data. Researcher as a key instrument. Data collection methods are observation, deep interview and documentation. <em>Parunrungi baju </em>and <em>attrarasa’s </em>tradition is a traditional ceremony held by Konjo community in eastern Bulukumba, when  a child enters adulthood. The traditional still exists carried out by the community of Konjo until now, as a way to appreciate the ancestrals heritage. According to the islamic perpective on the procession of the traditional ceremonies, such as the presentation of offerings and flattening of teeth <em>(attarasa)</em> is considered contradictory to the existing rules in islam.<br /><p align="center"> </p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (Supplement_4) ◽  
Author(s):  
B Unim ◽  
E Mattei ◽  
F Carle ◽  
E Bernal-Delgado ◽  
P Achterberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Data collection methods, metadata-reporting standards and usage of data for health monitoring (HM) and health system performance assessment (HSPA) are not uniform in Europe. Moreover, the evidence produced by research are not always available, comparable or usable for research purposes and policy making. The aim is to summarize health data collection methods, quality assessment, availability and accessibility procedures covering different data sources for HM and HSPA across EU countries. Methods The study is conducted through a multidimensional approach, which includes: i) a review of institutional websites (OECD, Eurostat, WHO-Europe); ii) a review of EU research networks; and iii) a multi-national survey addressing epidemiologists, health data managers and researchers that have played leading roles in EU projects. Currently, the survey instrument is being piloted. A qualitative data analysis to describe and compare the identified data sources for HM and HSPA will be performed. Results As part of the work within the Joint Action ‘Information for Action’ (InfAct), the study will generate knowledge on standardized health data collections and related metadata, used methods and procedures for HM and HSPA in EU. It will also facilitate the identification of national or sub-national health data collected through standardized procedures but not included in international databases or research networks. Conclusions The lack of infrastructures for health data sharing in EU limits data usage and comparability within and between countries. This study, as part of InfAct, will facilitate the assessment of health inequalities across EU countries in terms of quality, availability, accessibility and comparability of health data and information. It will also facilitate sharing and dissemination of standardized and comparable health data collections, which are essential for research and evidence-based policy-making.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 70-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mervat S. Jasem ◽  
Odey AL-Hamadani

OpenStreetMap (OSM) represents the most common example of online volunteered mapping applications. Most of these platforms are open source spatial data collected by non-experts volunteers using different data collection methods. OSM project aims to provide a free digital map for all the world. The heterogeneity in data collection methods made OSM project databases accuracy is unreliable and must be dealt with caution for any engineering application. This study aims to assess the horizontal positional accuracy of three spatial data sources are OSM road network database, high-resolution Satellite Image (SI), and high-resolution Aerial Photo (AP) of Baghdad city with respect to an analogue formal road network dataset obtained from the Mayoralty of Baghdad (MB). The methodology of, U.S. National Standard Spatial Data Accuracy (NSSDA) was applied to measure the degree of agreement between each data source and the formal dataset (MB) in terms of horizontal positional accuracy by computing RMSE and NSSDA values. The study concluded that each of the three data sources does not agree with the MB dataset in both study sites AL-Aadhamiyah and AL-Kadhumiyah in terms of positional accuracy.


Author(s):  
William P. Bintz

This article reports research results from an analyzsis of frequency and content of read aloud articles published between 2011 and 2015 in selected, national, peer-reviewed journals across the K-8 curriculum. An introduction describes the problem, purpose, and limitations of the study. It provides a review of research on reading aloud at home, in school, across the curriculum, and across grade bands. It also identifies research questions, discusses frequency and content analysis as research methodologies, and describes data sources, data collection methods, and data analysis procedures, followed by a presentation of results.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Mitchell ◽  
Winston Bennett ◽  
J. J. Weissmuller ◽  
R. L. Gosc ◽  
Patricia Waldroop ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arne Weigold ◽  
Ingrid K. Weigold ◽  
Elizabeth J. Russell ◽  
John Shook ◽  
Sara N. Natera ◽  
...  

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