Difference between revisions of "Lapadat-Lindsay1999"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Judith C. Lapadat; Anne C. Lindsay; |Title=Transcription in Research and Practice: From Standardization of Technique to Interpretive Pos...")
 
 
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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Judith C. Lapadat; Anne C. Lindsay;
 
|Author(s)=Judith C. Lapadat; Anne C. Lindsay;
|Title=Transcription in Research and Practice: From Standardization of Technique to Interpretive Positionings  
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|Title=Transcription in Research and Practice: From Standardization of Technique to Interpretive Positionings
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Transcription; Methodology;  
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; Transcription; Methodology;
 
|Key=Lapadat-Lindsay1999
 
|Key=Lapadat-Lindsay1999
 
|Year=1999
 
|Year=1999
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|Volume=5
 
|Volume=5
 
|Number=1
 
|Number=1
|Pages=64-86
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|Pages=64–86
|DOI=https://doi.org/10.1177/107780049900500104
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|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/107780049900500104
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|DOI=10.1177/107780049900500104
 
|Abstract=Transcription is an integral process in the qualitative analysis of language data and is widely employed in basic and applied research across a number of disciplines and in professional practice fields. Yet, methodological and theoretical issues associated with the transcription process have received scant attention in the research literature. In this article, the authors present a cross-disciplinary conceptual review of the place of transcription in qualitative inquiry, in which the nature of transcription and the epistemological assumptions on which it rests are considered. The authors conclude that transcription is theory laden; the choices that researchers make about transcription enact the theories they hold and constrain the interpretations they can draw from their data. Because it has implications for the interpretation of research data and for decision making in practice fields, transcription as a process warrants further investigation.
 
|Abstract=Transcription is an integral process in the qualitative analysis of language data and is widely employed in basic and applied research across a number of disciplines and in professional practice fields. Yet, methodological and theoretical issues associated with the transcription process have received scant attention in the research literature. In this article, the authors present a cross-disciplinary conceptual review of the place of transcription in qualitative inquiry, in which the nature of transcription and the epistemological assumptions on which it rests are considered. The authors conclude that transcription is theory laden; the choices that researchers make about transcription enact the theories they hold and constrain the interpretations they can draw from their data. Because it has implications for the interpretation of research data and for decision making in practice fields, transcription as a process warrants further investigation.
 
}}
 
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Latest revision as of 05:07, 19 October 2019

Lapadat-Lindsay1999
BibType ARTICLE
Key Lapadat-Lindsay1999
Author(s) Judith C. Lapadat, Anne C. Lindsay
Title Transcription in Research and Practice: From Standardization of Technique to Interpretive Positionings
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Transcription, Methodology
Publisher
Year 1999
Language English
City
Month
Journal Qualitative Inquiry
Volume 5
Number 1
Pages 64–86
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/107780049900500104
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Transcription is an integral process in the qualitative analysis of language data and is widely employed in basic and applied research across a number of disciplines and in professional practice fields. Yet, methodological and theoretical issues associated with the transcription process have received scant attention in the research literature. In this article, the authors present a cross-disciplinary conceptual review of the place of transcription in qualitative inquiry, in which the nature of transcription and the epistemological assumptions on which it rests are considered. The authors conclude that transcription is theory laden; the choices that researchers make about transcription enact the theories they hold and constrain the interpretations they can draw from their data. Because it has implications for the interpretation of research data and for decision making in practice fields, transcription as a process warrants further investigation.

Notes