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This book is the second edition of Facet Theory and the Mapping
Sentence: Evolving Philosophy, Use and Application (2014). It
consolidates the qualitative and quantitative research positions of
facet theory and delves deeper into their qualitative application
in psychology, social and the behavioural sciences and in the
humanities. In their traditional quantitative guise, facet theory
and its mapping sentence incorporate multi-dimensional statistics.
They are also a way of thinking systematically and thoroughly about
the world. The book is particularly concerned with the development
of the declarative mapping sentence as a tool and an approach to
qualitative research. The evolution of the facet theory approach is
presented along with many examples of its use in a wide variety of
research domains. Since the first edition, the major advance in
facet theory has been the formalization of the use of the
declarative mapping sentence and this is given a prominent position
in the new edition. The book will be compelling reading for
students at all levels and for academics and research professionals
from the humanities, social sciences and behavioural sciences.
This book acts as an introductory guide to understanding and using
the mapping sentence as a tool in social science and humanities
research. The book fills the need for a concise text that simply
instructs how and when to use a mapping sentence and provides
practical examples. Mapping sentences are a major research
component and tool of facet theory. The book begins by covering the
background to mapping sentence, including the philosophy and theory
underpinning it. The following chapter discuss what mapping
sentence is, what different kinds of mapping sentences exist, and
knowing when and which to use it in a given situation. The book
then moves into describing how to write a mapping sentence and how
to analyse the information gained from mapping sentence research.
It ends with a consideration of the future developments of mapping
sentences and their applications across the social sciences and
humanities, including in particular psychology, marketing,
behavioural biology, art and health.
This book presents the facet theoretical framework as a tool for
facilitating the conception of complex animal behaviour research
and the design of research procedures through employing mapping
sentences. Using the facet theoretical framework, this book takes a
holistic view of bird behaviour. Components of bird behavior are
identified and then reassembled to facilitate an understanding of
the behaviour in the context of its natural occurrence. This
provides new insight on both the parts of the behaviour and how
these interact as a whole. The multi-faceted approach to designing,
evaluating and understanding bird behavior presented offers a
template that is adaptable for investigating a wide variety of
avian species and different forms of behaviour. Behavioural
biologists, animal and comparative psychologists, other natural and
behavioural scientists, as well as students of these disciplines
will find this book to be an interesting and enlightening read.
This book shows how prison officers may be able to significantly
influence extra-programmatic conditions, to enhance rehabilitation
outcomes and contribute to reducing reoffending. It does so through
a detailed review of the literature relating to prison-based
rehabilitation programmes, examining factors influencing their
outcomes and the effects of the prison officer role. Firstly the
book explores current understandings about the role of the prison
and effective offender rehabilitation programmes. It then describes
the processes of the integrative review of how prison officers can
support rehabilitation programmes in prisons. Review findings
suggest three main routes by which prison officers can contribute
to enhancing rehabilitation outcomes: influencing prison social
environments, enhancing prisoner treatment readiness and programme
engagement and identifying and supporting prisoners’ wider needs.
This book also explores avenues for further research in this area
using a declarative sentence mapping approach. Bridging two
previously distinct areas of research - prison officers and their
role; and prison rehabilitation interventions – this book offers
new understanding in the real-world context of prisons and their
staff as to how we can enhance rehabilitation outcomes. It will be
of great interest to academics in penology, forensic psychology,
probation, and offender rehabilitation fields. The book is also
valuable to postgraduate students and professionals working on
prison policy.
In this book, Hackett introduces the traditional usage of the
mapping sentence within quantitative research, reviews its
philosophical underpinnings, and proposes the "declarative mapping
sentence" as an instrument and approach to qualitative scholarship.
With a helpful glossary and a range of illustrative tables, Hackett
takes the reader through a straightforward introduction to mapping
sentences and their construction, before discussing declarative
mapping sentences and possible future research directions. This
innovative direction for social research provides a flexible
structure for research domain, and it allows qualitative research
results to be uniformly sorted. Declarative Mapping Sentences in
Qualitative Research will be essential reading for researchers,
academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of qualitative
psychology and psychological methods, as well as philosophical
psychology and social science research methods.
Using facet theory and Hackett's pioneering development of the
declarative mapping sentence (DMS) as a qualitative methodology,
this volume explains the process of formulating and applying the
DMS to critically assess female representation in science fiction.
Using a comparative approach to the development of female roles in
Western science fiction films and television, the authors
illustrate how the DMS is formulated and used to analyse the
psychological and behavioral profiles of female characters. By
maintaining the common structure of the DMS across films while
adapting its content for each female role, the text demonstrates
the flexibility of the DMS in providing a structure for varied
research domains, enabling results to be uniformly compared,
contrasted and classified. This insightful and thought-provoking
volume will appeal to researchers, academics and educators
interested in psychological methods and statistics, qualitative
research in gender identity, and research methods more generally.
Those especially interested in behavioural psychology, gender and
cinema, and science fiction will also benefit from this volume.
In this book, Hackett introduces the traditional usage of the
mapping sentence within quantitative research, reviews its
philosophical underpinnings, and proposes the "declarative mapping
sentence" as an instrument and approach to qualitative scholarship.
With a helpful glossary and a range of illustrative tables, Hackett
takes the reader through a straightforward introduction to mapping
sentences and their construction, before discussing declarative
mapping sentences and possible future research directions. This
innovative direction for social research provides a flexible
structure for research domain, and it allows qualitative research
results to be uniformly sorted. Declarative Mapping Sentences in
Qualitative Research will be essential reading for researchers,
academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of qualitative
psychology and psychological methods, as well as philosophical
psychology and social science research methods.
This book focuses on developing the use of ethnographic research
for rehabilitation practitioners by recognizing its value
methodologically and empirically in the field of rehabilitation.
The very nature of ethnographic research offers an array of
opportunities for researchers to understand the social world around
them. The book identifies the multifaceted use of ethnographic
methods in the rehabilitation setting. It touches on how acute and
chronic conditions can affect the nature of ethnographic work in
attempts to offer originality in a range of rehabilitation
settings. Readers will find this collection of examples useful for
informing their own research, and it aims to enlighten new
discussion and arguments regarding both methodological and
empirical use of ethnographic work internationally.
The assignment events, objects, state of beings, etc., to an
experiential category is a fundamental activity carried out by
human (and by other animals). So rudimentary are the processes
involved in categorizing that it is indeed impossible to imagine
conscious awareness to exist without the presence of categories. A
considerable body of writing exists on categories dating from the
times of Classical philosophy. Plato developed a categorical
ontology and Aristotle produced one of the earliest examples of a
complex understanding of basic ontologies. A number of other
categorially structured ontologies have been proposed including
those by Lowe, Westerhoff, Chisholm, etc. The book is an edited
collection of up to the moment essays that address critical aspects
on the understanding of categories and categorial systems. The
perspectives included in the book are drawn from philosophy,
psychology, theology, divinity, comparative cognition and facet
theory. The authors are all renowned experts in the area of their
writing. Topics addressed include both contemporary advances in the
understanding of perennial debates and latest thinking upon how
categories are employed to structure our experiences of the world
we live in. The book is distinct as being written by philosophers
and psychologists. The book is a collection of writings from
selected academics at the fore of debates and understandings of
categories in contemporary thought. The text provides a single
source for contemporary scholarship in categories. No single text
that brings together expositions of categorial experiences for
students and academics within the above listed disciplines.
This book offers a comprehensive look into issues and trends
driving international student mobility as the phenomenon becomes
increasingly prevalent worldwide. Chapters first present an
expanded definition of student mobility in the context of
internationalization and go on to discuss the underlying
motivations, issues, and challenges students face in attaining
successful outcomes. The authors employ marketing concepts to
illustrate ideas and recommendations for better attracting and
integrating international students into academic institutions
abroad with the goal of greater satisfaction for students and
improved profitability for the universities they attend.
This book examines how we perceive and understand abstract art in
contrast to artworks that represent reality. Philosophical,
psychological and neuroscience research, including the work of
philosopher Paul Crowther, are considered and out of these
approaches a complex model is developed to account for this
experience. The understanding embodied in this model is rooted in
facet theory, mapping sentences and partially ordered analyses,
which together provide a comprehensive understanding of the
perceptual experience of abstract art.
This book is the second edition of Facet Theory and the Mapping
Sentence: Evolving Philosophy, Use and Application (2014). It
consolidates the qualitative and quantitative research positions of
facet theory and delves deeper into their qualitative application
in psychology, social and the behavioural sciences and in the
humanities. In their traditional quantitative guise, facet theory
and its mapping sentence incorporate multi-dimensional statistics.
They are also a way of thinking systematically and thoroughly about
the world. The book is particularly concerned with the development
of the declarative mapping sentence as a tool and an approach to
qualitative research. The evolution of the facet theory approach is
presented along with many examples of its use in a wide variety of
research domains. Since the first edition, the major advance in
facet theory has been the formalization of the use of the
declarative mapping sentence and this is given a prominent position
in the new edition. The book will be compelling reading for
students at all levels and for academics and research professionals
from the humanities, social sciences and behavioural sciences.
This book presents the facet theoretical framework as a tool for
facilitating the conception of complex animal behaviour research
and the design of research procedures through employing mapping
sentences. Using the facet theoretical framework, this book takes a
holistic view of bird behaviour. Components of bird behavior are
identified and then reassembled to facilitate an understanding of
the behaviour in the context of its natural occurrence. This
provides new insight on both the parts of the behaviour and how
these interact as a whole. The multi-faceted approach to designing,
evaluating and understanding bird behavior presented offers a
template that is adaptable for investigating a wide variety of
avian species and different forms of behaviour. Behavioural
biologists, animal and comparative psychologists, other natural and
behavioural scientists, as well as students of these disciplines
will find this book to be an interesting and enlightening read.
Projective Techniques and Sort-Based Research Methods offers a
brief introductory guide to the use of these exciting, innovative
and often artistic approaches, to students and researchers who have
no prior knowledge of these. This book brings together a wide range
of examples of projective and mapping techniques that offer the
ideal methodology for researchers wishing to collect less
controlled and filtered material, that tap the deeper levels of the
conscious and sub-conscious to reveal a more profound, richer and
hidden level of response. It presents the techniques in a way that
will enable the reader to appreciate their nature and to choose an
appropriate method for their own research. Information is also
provided that allows readers to design and implement their own
projective or sort-based approaches. Each of the approaches the
authors present are concisely described, and their usages
explained, along with references and examples of the applied usage
of the technique. The book is valuable reading for researchers from
a wide range of academic disciplines from within the social
sciences, humanities, business studies, marketing, etc. The book is
an introductory guide, but it will be appropriate for use with
undergraduate, post-graduate and research students. It will also be
of great use to professionals working in the areas of consumer
behaviour, marketing and communications.
This book deals with philosophical aspects regarding the perception
of spatial relationships in two and three-dimensional art. It
provides a structural understanding of how art is perceived within
the space created by the artwork, and employs a mapping sentence
and partial order mereology to model perceptual structure. It
reviews the writing of philosophers such as Paul Crowther and art
theorists such as Krauss to establish the need for this research.
The ontological model established Paul Crowther is used to guide an
interactive account of his ontology in the interpretations of the
perceptual process of three-dimensional abstract art to allow the
formulation of a more comprehensive philosophical account. The book
uniquely combines structuralist and post-structuralist approaches
to artistic perception and understanding with a conceptual
structure from facet theory, which is clarified with the help of a
mapping sentence and partial order mereology.
This book offers a comprehensive look into issues and trends
driving international student mobility as the phenomenon becomes
increasingly prevalent worldwide. Chapters first present an
expanded definition of student mobility in the context of
internationalization and go on to discuss the underlying
motivations, issues, and challenges students face in attaining
successful outcomes. The authors employ marketing concepts to
illustrate ideas and recommendations for better attracting and
integrating international students into academic institutions
abroad with the goal of greater satisfaction for students and
improved profitability for the universities they attend.
This book provides students with a clear and concise guide to
studying undergraduate courses in qualitative consumer research and
ethnography. The authors present the major qualitative research
approaches used in consumer and marketing research as well as
practical procedures and theoretical aspects of research design,
report presentation etc. In addition to that a weekly study guide,
including comprehensive reading lists, completes the book.
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