Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data. / Astrupgaard, Sofie Læbo; Lohse, August; Gregersen, Emilie Munch; Holm Salka, Jonathan; Albris, Kristoffer Langkjær; Pedersen, Morten Axel.

In: Social Science Computer Review, Vol. (E-pub ahead of print), 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Astrupgaard, SL, Lohse, A, Gregersen, EM, Holm Salka, J, Albris, KL & Pedersen, MA 2023, 'Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data', Social Science Computer Review, vol. (E-pub ahead of print). https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488

APA

Astrupgaard, S. L., Lohse, A., Gregersen, E. M., Holm Salka, J., Albris, K. L., & Pedersen, M. A. (2023). Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data. Social Science Computer Review, (E-pub ahead of print). https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488

Vancouver

Astrupgaard SL, Lohse A, Gregersen EM, Holm Salka J, Albris KL, Pedersen MA. Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data. Social Science Computer Review. 2023;(E-pub ahead of print). https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488

Author

Astrupgaard, Sofie Læbo ; Lohse, August ; Gregersen, Emilie Munch ; Holm Salka, Jonathan ; Albris, Kristoffer Langkjær ; Pedersen, Morten Axel. / Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data. In: Social Science Computer Review. 2023 ; Vol. (E-pub ahead of print).

Bibtex

@article{bac2f1df4e564152b9d621c6afd71353,
title = "Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data",
abstract = "Ethnographic fieldnotes can contain richer and more thorough descriptions of social phenomena compared to other data sources. Their open-ended and flexible character makes them especially useful in explorative research. However, fieldnotes are typically highly unstructured and personalized by individual researchers, which make them harder to use as a method for data collection in collaborative and mixed methods research. More precisely, the unstructured nature of ethnographic fieldnotes presents three distinct challenges: 1) Organizability—it can be difficult to search and sort fieldnotes and thus to get an overview of them, 2) Integrability—it is difficult to meaningfully integrate fieldnotes with other more quantitative data types such as more such as surveys or geospatial data, and 3) Computational Processability—it is hard to process and analyze fieldnotes with computational methods such as topic models and network analysis. To solve these three challenges, we present a new digital tool, for the systematic collection, processing, and analysis of ethnographic fieldnotes. The tool is developed and tested as part of an interdisciplinary mixed methods pilot study on attention dynamics at a political festival in Denmark. Through case examples from this study, we show how adopting this new digital tool allowed our team to overcome the three aforementioned challenges of fieldnotes, while retaining the flexible and explorative character of ethnographic research, which is a key strength of ethnographic fieldwork.",
author = "Astrupgaard, {Sofie L{\ae}bo} and August Lohse and Gregersen, {Emilie Munch} and {Holm Salka}, Jonathan and Albris, {Kristoffer Langkj{\ae}r} and Pedersen, {Morten Axel}",
year = "2023",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488",
language = "English",
volume = "(E-pub ahead of print)",
journal = "Social Science Computer Review",
issn = "0894-4393",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fixing Fieldnotes: Developing and Testing a Digital Tool for the Collection, Processing, and Analysis of Ethnographic Data

AU - Astrupgaard, Sofie Læbo

AU - Lohse, August

AU - Gregersen, Emilie Munch

AU - Holm Salka, Jonathan

AU - Albris, Kristoffer Langkjær

AU - Pedersen, Morten Axel

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Ethnographic fieldnotes can contain richer and more thorough descriptions of social phenomena compared to other data sources. Their open-ended and flexible character makes them especially useful in explorative research. However, fieldnotes are typically highly unstructured and personalized by individual researchers, which make them harder to use as a method for data collection in collaborative and mixed methods research. More precisely, the unstructured nature of ethnographic fieldnotes presents three distinct challenges: 1) Organizability—it can be difficult to search and sort fieldnotes and thus to get an overview of them, 2) Integrability—it is difficult to meaningfully integrate fieldnotes with other more quantitative data types such as more such as surveys or geospatial data, and 3) Computational Processability—it is hard to process and analyze fieldnotes with computational methods such as topic models and network analysis. To solve these three challenges, we present a new digital tool, for the systematic collection, processing, and analysis of ethnographic fieldnotes. The tool is developed and tested as part of an interdisciplinary mixed methods pilot study on attention dynamics at a political festival in Denmark. Through case examples from this study, we show how adopting this new digital tool allowed our team to overcome the three aforementioned challenges of fieldnotes, while retaining the flexible and explorative character of ethnographic research, which is a key strength of ethnographic fieldwork.

AB - Ethnographic fieldnotes can contain richer and more thorough descriptions of social phenomena compared to other data sources. Their open-ended and flexible character makes them especially useful in explorative research. However, fieldnotes are typically highly unstructured and personalized by individual researchers, which make them harder to use as a method for data collection in collaborative and mixed methods research. More precisely, the unstructured nature of ethnographic fieldnotes presents three distinct challenges: 1) Organizability—it can be difficult to search and sort fieldnotes and thus to get an overview of them, 2) Integrability—it is difficult to meaningfully integrate fieldnotes with other more quantitative data types such as more such as surveys or geospatial data, and 3) Computational Processability—it is hard to process and analyze fieldnotes with computational methods such as topic models and network analysis. To solve these three challenges, we present a new digital tool, for the systematic collection, processing, and analysis of ethnographic fieldnotes. The tool is developed and tested as part of an interdisciplinary mixed methods pilot study on attention dynamics at a political festival in Denmark. Through case examples from this study, we show how adopting this new digital tool allowed our team to overcome the three aforementioned challenges of fieldnotes, while retaining the flexible and explorative character of ethnographic research, which is a key strength of ethnographic fieldwork.

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488

DO - https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231220488

M3 - Journal article

VL - (E-pub ahead of print)

JO - Social Science Computer Review

JF - Social Science Computer Review

SN - 0894-4393

ER -

ID: 376287783