Using Greimas' Semiotics in Ethnic Consumer Research

2016 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginie Silhouette-Dercourt ◽  
Christel de Lassus

With a rapidly growing number of consumers experiencing migration around the world, the need for new research methodologies to understand ethnic consumption becomes more pressing for managers operating in global markets. The objective of this contribution is to show that Greimasian semiotics is a very relevant interpretive framework to capture the symbolic and dynamic dimensions of ethnicity. In the context of a three-cities research programme (Paris, Berlin, Kuala Lumpur), we use the spatial identity semiotic square to interpret consumers' discourses in the context of dominated and non-dominated acculturation experiences. We show that informants' discourses are structured around four identity anchors and that dual culture consumers use products, brands, ingredients and retail environments to construct their identities. Managing two spatial reference points within a coherent self can be, at times, challenging for consumers coming from ‘third’ or ‘first’ world countries. The issue is even more pressing for ethnic consumers who experience discrimination, since they are constantly reminded of their difference. This research confirms the relevance of semiotics, in terms of market research methodology, for grasping the deeper symbolic dimensions of ethnic consumers' discourse.

Author(s):  
Harry Collins ◽  
Robert Evans

The research programme known as Studies of Expertise and Experience (SEE), often referred to as the “Third Wave of Science Studies,” treats expertise as real and as the property of social groups. This chapter explains the foundations of SEE and sets out the theoretical and methodological innovations created using this approach. These include the development of a new classification of expertise, which identifies a new kind of expertise called “interactional expertise,” and the creation of a new research method known as the Imitation Game designed to explore the content and distribution of interactional expertise. It concludes by showing how SEE illuminates a number of contemporary issues such as the challenges of interdisciplinary working and the role of experts in a “post-truth” society.


1995 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 93-96
Author(s):  
C.E Bøggild ◽  
J.-G Winther

From November 1993 to February 1994 members of the Geological Survey of Greenland (GGU) participated in a Nordic research effort in Antarctica. The Nordic Antarctic Research Programme (NARP) involves Norway, Sweden and Finland, which are all Antarctic Treaty Consultative Partners; Denmark as an observer has participated only since 1992 (Thomsen, 1994; Boggild et al., 1995). The member countries of NARP have traditionally carried out research in Dronning Maud Land. This region of Antarctica has recently gained new research interest, including survey for a joint European deep drilling programme planned for 1995/96. Future Norwegian climate studies on blue ice will therefore be closely related to the joint European deep drilling programme.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuxing Ma ◽  
Tapajit Dey ◽  
Jarred M Smith ◽  
Nathan Wilder ◽  
Audris Mockus

In software repository mining, it's important to have a broad representation of projects. In particular, it may be of interest to know what proportion of projects are public. Discovering public projects can be easily parallelized but not so easy to automate due to a variety of data sources. We evaluate the research and educational potential of crowd-sourcing such research activity in an educational setting. Students were instructed on three ways of discovering the projects and assigned a task to discover the list of public projects from top 45 forges with each student assigned to one forge. Students had to discover as many of the projects as they could using the method of their choice and provide a market-research report for a fictional customer based on the attribute they selected. A subset of the results was sampled and verified for accuracy. We found that many of the public forges do not host public projects, that a substantial fraction of forges do not provide APIs and the APIs vary dramatically among the remaining forges. Some forges have been discontinued and others renamed, making the discovery task into an archaeological exercise. The students' findings raise a number of new research questions and demonstrate the teaching potential of the approach. The accuracy of the results obtained, however, was low, suggesting that crowd-sourcing would require at least two or more likely a larger number of investigators per forge or a better way to gauge investigator skill. We expect that these lessons will be helpful in creating education-sourcing efforts in software data discovery.


Author(s):  
Tian Yi Song ◽  
Guang Xu Yu ◽  
Xue Hu Ma ◽  
John W. Rose ◽  
Hua Sheng Wang

The paper reports preliminary results from a new research programme for making accurate heat transfer and pressure drop measurements during condensation in microchannels. While commissioning the apparatus a dummy test section was used with identical channel and header geometry to that to be used in the main test program (The final test section will comprise a relatively thick copper test section containing 98 accurately located thermocouples for measuring the temperature distribution from which local heat flux and temperature at the microchannel surface will be obtained). While using the dummy test section (without embedded thermocouples) the opportunity was taken to make accurate pressure drop measurements while measuring the vapor flow rate and total heat transfer rate based on coolant measurements. Data have been obtained for FC72 and steam. Approximate comparisons with available pressure drop calculation methods are presented.


2003 ◽  
pp. 319-338
Author(s):  
Howard Dick ◽  
Peter J. Rimmer
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document