Wednesday, 31 October 2012

TASK II



Cross-disciplinary

Refers to knowledge that      
explains aspects of one discipline in terms of another. Something that can define a system, task or investigation movement which can scrutinise a theme external the choice the correction without support or incorporation from the other appropriate disciplines. In cross-disciplinary, subjects are considered by external procedures of distinct disciplines. Common examples of cross-disciplinary approaches are studies of the physics of music or the politics of literature .


Transdisciplinarity:  means a study scheme that signs many disciplinary borders to generate a complete method. It applies to exploration struggles focused on difficulties that cross the limits of two or more disciplines, such as research on effective evidence systems for biomedical research, and can refer to concepts or approaches that were originally developed by one discipline, but are now used by several others, such as ethnography, a field examination method originally developed in anthropology but now widely used by other disciplines.


Interdisciplinary: The study, or practice, of a subject which applies the methods and approaches of several disciplines. For instance, while History, Literature and Archaeology are separate disciplines, they can be combined.

Qualitative research: Is designed to reveal a target audience’s range of behaviour and the perceptions that drive it with reference to specific topics or issues. It uses in-depth studies of small groups of people to guide and support the construction of hypotheses. The results of qualitative research are descriptive rather than predictive.
Qualitative research methods originated in the social and behavioural sciences: sociology, anthropology and psychology. Today, qualitative methods in the field of marketing research include in-depth interviews with individuals, group discussions (from two to ten participants is typical); diary and journal exercises; and in-context observations. Sessions may be conducted in person, by telephone, via video conferencing and via the Internet.

Ethnography research: Focuses on cultural interpretation, for the purposes of description or extension of social theory.
Ethnography is a systematic study of a particular cultural group or phenomenon, based upon extensive eldwork in one or more selected locales.


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