| Literature DB >> 30428834 |
Frances Rapport1, Jeffrey Braithwaite2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The dominant medical and health research paradigm continues to be quantitative. While the authors sense a sea-change in opinion about mixed-method research, underpinned by two decades of highly-cited publications in medical journals, much of the medical literature still widely favours the Randomised Control Trial. MAIN BODY: This debate article examines whether it is the beginning of the end of the dominant quantitative paradigm and the interest this holds for researchers and clinicians at the forefront of care delivery. It examines the Third Research Paradigm, signifying the importance of mixed-methods, and discusses the power of the patient voice and person-focused research activity. The authors discern the coming of age of a Fourth Research Paradigm integrating mixed-methods with data collected 'on the hoof'. Within this new paradigm, the article explores the power of available, real time, and emergent data - from smart phones, wearable devices, and social media, as well as more creative approaches to data collection. The Fourth Research Paradigm will require the support of multi-disciplinary teams, moving through the world alongside their research subjects. The impact of a Fourth Research Paradigm on the health researcher is assessed, as the researcher's gaze moves away from considerations of methodological superiority to re-considerations of their role in the brave new world of research multiplicity.Entities:
Keywords: Complexity; Fourth research paradigm; Methodological development; Mobile methods; Qualitative research; The future of healthcare; Third research paradigm
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30428834 PMCID: PMC6237033 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-018-0597-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
The Paradigms of Research: Principal Features
| First paradigm | Second paradigm | Third paradigm | Fourth paradigm | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epistemology | Scientific, Evidence-based | Social Scientific, Qualitative | Multi-Method, Pragmatism | Fluid, Creative, Exploratory |
| Data type | Statistical, Precise, Explanatory | Linguistic, Descriptive, Interpretive | Combined (Statistical and Linguistic) | Mobile, Shared, Emergent |
| Research-subject relationship | Objective, Standardized | Subjective, Personalized | Pluralist, Versatile | Democratic, Equalizing, Adaptive |
| Researcher position | Inquisitor, Realist | Observer, Interpreter | Witness, Aggregator | Partner, Listener |
| Methodology | Randomised Controlled Trial, Before and After Study, Time Series, Interrupted Time Series, Cohort Study, Systematic Review | Ethnography, Case Study, Phenomenology, Grounded Theory, Meta-Ethnography, Meta-Narrative | Mixed-Methods | Performative, Science-Social Science, Ethnographic, Poetic Representation |
| Methods | Scientific Measurements and Computational Techniques | Focus Groups, | Quantitative and Qualitative Data that can be Synthesized | Multiple methods from other paradigms, plus Technological Data (Smartphones, Apps), Social Media Data, Performance, Biographies and Photographs, Everyday Objects, Obscure Phenomena, Auto-biography |
| Data Characteristics | Set, Precise, Population-based, Explanatory | Interrogative, In-depth, Rich, Patterned | Dichotomous, Situational, Pragmatic, Triangulated | Nuanced, Ambiguous, Complex, Anomalous, Flexible |