Difference between revisions of "Krug2018"

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|Year=2018
 
|Year=2018
 
|Language=German
 
|Language=German
|Month=sep
 
 
|Journal=Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research
 
|Journal=Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research
 
|Volume=19
 
|Volume=19
 
|Number=3
 
|Number=3
 +
|URL=https://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3103
 
|DOI=10.17169/fqs-19.3.3103
 
|DOI=10.17169/fqs-19.3.3103
 
|Abstract=Audio-visual recording of human interaction constitutes the empirical foundations of research in many social science disciplines. The cooperation and interactive coordination of participants is at the center of qualitative analyses and is often recorded simultaneously by several video cameras. But little ethical reflection has occurred about how this data was recorded, which prearrangements were necessary, how the researchers discharge their tasks of supervision and responsibility towards the participants and which sources of stress voluntary participants face. An increasingly central role in the study designs of interaction and communication research is mobile eye tracking. This technology provides the researchers with more insight into human gaze behavior; but participants often perceive it invasive and painful. With respect to the current discussion about research ethics in the qualitative social sciences, we reconstruct various situations within research studies with participants wearing mobile eye tracking-glasses regarding the ethical conduct of researchers and participants. In the center of our ethical reflection is the question how researchers process in situ their responsibilities for participants with respect to the degree of invasiveness and voluntariness of research studies.
 
|Abstract=Audio-visual recording of human interaction constitutes the empirical foundations of research in many social science disciplines. The cooperation and interactive coordination of participants is at the center of qualitative analyses and is often recorded simultaneously by several video cameras. But little ethical reflection has occurred about how this data was recorded, which prearrangements were necessary, how the researchers discharge their tasks of supervision and responsibility towards the participants and which sources of stress voluntary participants face. An increasingly central role in the study designs of interaction and communication research is mobile eye tracking. This technology provides the researchers with more insight into human gaze behavior; but participants often perceive it invasive and painful. With respect to the current discussion about research ethics in the qualitative social sciences, we reconstruct various situations within research studies with participants wearing mobile eye tracking-glasses regarding the ethical conduct of researchers and participants. In the center of our ethical reflection is the question how researchers process in situ their responsibilities for participants with respect to the degree of invasiveness and voluntariness of research studies.
 
}}
 
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Latest revision as of 01:50, 31 August 2023

Krug2018
BibType ARTICLE
Key Krug2018
Author(s) Maximilian Krug, Svenja Heuser
Title Ethik im Feld: Forschungspraxis in audiovisuellen Studien
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Audio-visual data, Conversation Analysis, Eye tracking, Multimodality, Research ethics, Data management
Publisher
Year 2018
Language German
City
Month
Journal Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Volume 19
Number 3
Pages
URL Link
DOI 10.17169/fqs-19.3.3103
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Audio-visual recording of human interaction constitutes the empirical foundations of research in many social science disciplines. The cooperation and interactive coordination of participants is at the center of qualitative analyses and is often recorded simultaneously by several video cameras. But little ethical reflection has occurred about how this data was recorded, which prearrangements were necessary, how the researchers discharge their tasks of supervision and responsibility towards the participants and which sources of stress voluntary participants face. An increasingly central role in the study designs of interaction and communication research is mobile eye tracking. This technology provides the researchers with more insight into human gaze behavior; but participants often perceive it invasive and painful. With respect to the current discussion about research ethics in the qualitative social sciences, we reconstruct various situations within research studies with participants wearing mobile eye tracking-glasses regarding the ethical conduct of researchers and participants. In the center of our ethical reflection is the question how researchers process in situ their responsibilities for participants with respect to the degree of invasiveness and voluntariness of research studies.

Notes