Quantitative and Qualitative Research: Beyond the Debate
Behavior
Statistics as Topic
05 social sciences
Reproducibility of Results
Mind-Body Relations, Metaphysical
03 medical and health sciences
Mental Processes
0302 clinical medicine
Research Design
0502 economics and business
Humans
Psychology
Psychological Theory
DOI:
10.1007/s12124-008-9078-3
Publication Date:
2008-09-15T12:56:56Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Psychology has been a highly quantitative field since its conception as a science. However, a qualitative approach to psychological research has gained increasing importance in the last decades, and an enduring debate between quantitative and qualitative approaches has arisen. The recently developed Mixed Methods Research (MMR) addresses this debate by aiming to integrate quantitative and qualitative approaches. This article outlines and discusses quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods research approaches with specific reference to their (1) philosophical foundations (i.e. basic sets of beliefs that ground inquiry), (2) methodological assumptions (i.e. principles and formal conditions which guide scientific investigation), and (3) research methods (i.e. concrete procedures for data collection, analysis and interpretation). We conclude that MMR may reasonably overcome the limitation of purely quantitative and purely qualitative approaches at each of these levels, providing a fruitful context for a more comprehensive psychological research.
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