Dyadic interviews are an approach to qualitative data collection designed to understand the meaning pairs of individuals make from experiences. The greatest benefit of dyadic interviews, and perhaps a reason for their gaining momentum in the literature, is that they encourage participants to interact, resulting in detailed and complex descriptions of phenomena. However, dyadic interviews pose challenges to qualitative researchers. Researchers must figure out how to account for the presence of two interviewees, any differences in perspective, and interactions. Unfortunately, no known study demonstrates how the interactions of dyadic interviews can be analyzed in accordance with a methodological approach. Rather, researchers tend to observe p...
Researchers in the field of sport psychology have begun to highlight the potential of phenomenologic...
This paper analyzes the power relation between the interviewer and the interviewee in the qualitativ...
The study of business relationships poses a number of challenges. This article focuses specifically...
Dyadic interviews, in which two participants are interviewed together, are becoming more popular in ...
Dyadic, or joint, interviewing has appeared in studies since the 1970s (Arksey, 1996). However, it i...
© Copyright 2000-2021 The British Psychological Society. This is the accepted manuscript version of ...
open access articleDespite a growing literature on the value of relational data in studies of social...
In this manuscript, the authors discuss using paired depth interviews as a method of collecting qual...
This paper distinguishes a series of contingent and necessary problems that arise in the design, con...
Objective: An emerging trend in qualitative research is to use individual participant data to stimul...
The purpose of this article is to contextualize qualitative phenomenological psychological interview...
After presenting a brief overview of the complexity of the qualitative interviewing process used by ...
There are an increasing number of qualitative studies which focus on the dyad (couples, families, ca...
The study of business relationships poses a number of challenges. This article focuses specifically ...
Interaction among participants is the fundamental mechanism that generates data in focus groups. Des...
Researchers in the field of sport psychology have begun to highlight the potential of phenomenologic...
This paper analyzes the power relation between the interviewer and the interviewee in the qualitativ...
The study of business relationships poses a number of challenges. This article focuses specifically...
Dyadic interviews, in which two participants are interviewed together, are becoming more popular in ...
Dyadic, or joint, interviewing has appeared in studies since the 1970s (Arksey, 1996). However, it i...
© Copyright 2000-2021 The British Psychological Society. This is the accepted manuscript version of ...
open access articleDespite a growing literature on the value of relational data in studies of social...
In this manuscript, the authors discuss using paired depth interviews as a method of collecting qual...
This paper distinguishes a series of contingent and necessary problems that arise in the design, con...
Objective: An emerging trend in qualitative research is to use individual participant data to stimul...
The purpose of this article is to contextualize qualitative phenomenological psychological interview...
After presenting a brief overview of the complexity of the qualitative interviewing process used by ...
There are an increasing number of qualitative studies which focus on the dyad (couples, families, ca...
The study of business relationships poses a number of challenges. This article focuses specifically ...
Interaction among participants is the fundamental mechanism that generates data in focus groups. Des...
Researchers in the field of sport psychology have begun to highlight the potential of phenomenologic...
This paper analyzes the power relation between the interviewer and the interviewee in the qualitativ...
The study of business relationships poses a number of challenges. This article focuses specifically...