Quali-Quanti discussions at Ubicomp

Here at Ubicomp 2006, there was a very pertinent discussion yesterday (instead of having a talk that everybody was awaiting: “No more SMS from Jesus? Ubicomp, religion and techno-spiritual practices” by Genevieve Bell) about methodologies to study mobile technologies (by Beki Grinter and Ken Anderson).

First, one of the remark was about the inherent problems of ethnographic studies to study artifacts that go everywhere (and even more likely to be used in toilets, as opposed to food).

But the most interesting part (to me) was the discussion about the bridge between qualitative and quantitative methods. Yahoo/UC Berkeley’s Marc Davis advocated for a new “computational social science” that would use mixed-methods (quali-quanti), aka “the new social science of the 21st century”. His point was that we have access to an incredible quantity of data (ranging from interview to logged actions) that would allow us to gain information about different layers: from micro scale cognitive insights to large group processes (social groups, national issues…).

Unlike Anne which states that “quantitative methods are still being trotted out to save qualitative methods from their perceived inadequacies, a.k.a. “Real Science To The Rescue!”“, I haven’t felt that. Given the fact that the conversant were largely qualitative-data oriented, he tried to summarize the advantages of bridging both qualitative and quantitative data collection and analysis:

  • Large datasets can enable us to know who to talk to (who to interview, or with whom to deepen the study with ethnographic methods): who are representatives (or not) in the groups
  • It can allow to reveal unconscious behavior (that users cannot state)
  • A nice avenue of research they’re pushing forward in his team is to compute visualizations (based on quantitative data) and then get back to the users to discuss with them. This is exactly what I am doing with CatchBob! visualizations of coordination as well as presenting the players a replay of their activity. This provides a basis for the discussion about “what they did” and “why they did it” (with of course some different “epistemological levels”).
  • Qualitative analysis can also allow to redesign the sensors and the logged information that would be better suitable/more interesting.

He said that we’re going “From what to why” to “From why to what”

Jeff Axup, as a follow-up, explained how different methods can be apply to different moment in the conception and that it’s an iterative process: quanti can help provide focus for quali, then it allows to discover new dimensions in which quantitative methods could be applied.

(See also Joe McCarthy’s thoughts)

Why do I blog this? because I am right in the middle of this discussion. In my study of how people use location-awareness in the pervasive game CatchBob! I encountered the same issues. What is curious however, is that the discussion stayed at the data level and did not address the theoretical assumptions from all those methods.

3 Responses to “Quali-Quanti discussions at Ubicomp”

  1. Anne Says:

    Since I wasn’t there, obviously, I was only referring to Joe’s comments (”where quantitative methods can help address problems in qualitative methods such as scale and memory fallibility”)…

    In any case, as much as I like the idea of using many different kinds of methods, I don’t think that qualitative and quantitative methods are always compatible: for example, there are fundamental ontological and epistemological differences if one approach assumes that intentions and unconscious behaviours can be known, and another approach does not.

  2. Mauro Says:

    Hi Nico,

    do you have the pdf or the link for this talk about methodologies to study mobile technologies?
    Sounds interesting. Your notes?
    Best from craftland

    Mauro

  3. Nicolas Says:

    Anne: I agree with you Anne, that’s why I mentioned the fact that “it did not address the theoretical assumptions of all those methods”. Bridging Conversation Analysis with content analysis (that use inter-rater reliability) can be problematic.

    Mauro: no pdf, it was just a discussion and I put all my notes in the blogpost

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