In response to the ever-growing volume of data, quantitative social research has become increasingly dependent on complex inferential methods. In this post, Kevin R. Murphy argues that whilst these methods can provide insights, they should not detract from the significance of the comparatively simple descriptive statistics often found in table 1, which play an important role in communicating the significance of the research to policymakers and other research users
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Big data technologies are increasingly being utilised in the field of social policy. Although big da...
Almost all qualitative and quantitative research into human society involves the participation of ot...
For many years, academia has relied on citation count as the main way to measure the impact or impor...
We are living in an era in which we are defined by our data. But how have data analytics come to be ...
Academics are increasingly expected to produce directly applicable solutions to hard-to-solve "real-...
Tracking the policy impact of academic research is notoriously difficult, especially when academics ...
The impact of quantitative research measures on academic behaviours have been widely discussed, but ...
In the context of everyday research assessment citation counts are often taken as a simple indicator...
The value and potential of data re-use and the associated methodology of qualitative secondary analy...
Data sharing is a key principle of open science, and research funders are increasingly including thi...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
Superficially connecting evidence to policy might seem like singular process that brings together di...
Increased calls for data sharing have formed part of many governments' agendas to boost innovation a...
Surveys are the most common method of data collection used by Extension professionals, agricultural ...
The ways in which research quality and research impact are defined and measured are deeply embedded ...
Big data technologies are increasingly being utilised in the field of social policy. Although big da...
Almost all qualitative and quantitative research into human society involves the participation of ot...
For many years, academia has relied on citation count as the main way to measure the impact or impor...
We are living in an era in which we are defined by our data. But how have data analytics come to be ...
Academics are increasingly expected to produce directly applicable solutions to hard-to-solve "real-...
Tracking the policy impact of academic research is notoriously difficult, especially when academics ...
The impact of quantitative research measures on academic behaviours have been widely discussed, but ...
In the context of everyday research assessment citation counts are often taken as a simple indicator...
The value and potential of data re-use and the associated methodology of qualitative secondary analy...
Data sharing is a key principle of open science, and research funders are increasingly including thi...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
Superficially connecting evidence to policy might seem like singular process that brings together di...
Increased calls for data sharing have formed part of many governments' agendas to boost innovation a...
Surveys are the most common method of data collection used by Extension professionals, agricultural ...
The ways in which research quality and research impact are defined and measured are deeply embedded ...
Big data technologies are increasingly being utilised in the field of social policy. Although big da...