anthropological research

22
Anthropological Research Theories, Questions, Scales, Data, and Models

Upload: moeshe

Post on 23-Feb-2016

65 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

DESCRIPTION

Anthropological Research. Theories, Questions, Scales, Data, and Models . Anthropological Research. Research begins with an idea or question about something: From the literature Derived from a theory or model From a discovery of a pattern in the data - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Anthropological Research

Anthropological Research

Theories, Questions, Scales, Data, and Models

Page 2: Anthropological Research

Anthropological Research• Research begins with an idea or

question about something:– From the literature– Derived from a theory or model– From a discovery of a pattern in the

data• The purpose of research is to

evaluate the support for that idea

Page 3: Anthropological Research

Theories in Anthropology• Linked sets of statements about

how people behave and why, e.g.– Zipf’s Law of the Minimum – people

minimize their effort– Cultural Ecology – people behave in

ways that harmonize with their environment

– Behavioral Ecology – natural selection shapes our behavior

Page 4: Anthropological Research

Kinds of Theories in Anthropology

• Biology (population genetics)• Environment/Ecology (exogenous)• Demography (endogenous)• Culture (innovation, diffusion,

migration, interaction, stratification)

• Psychology (individual needs/wants/ strategic action)

Page 5: Anthropological Research

Who Questions• Who has power?• Who has wealth?• Who is related to whom?• Who were the first agriculturalists?• Who were the first Americans/

Australians?

Page 6: Anthropological Research

What Questions• What do people call their kin?• What are the rules for dividing

shares?• What kind of houses do they build?• What was this artifact used for?• What disturbances have altered

the site?

Page 7: Anthropological Research

When Questions• When did the first humans

emerge?• When did agriculture begin?• When did Western influences

become important?• When was the New World

colonized?

Page 8: Anthropological Research

Where Questions• Where do people live, work, play?• Where are various activities

performed?• Where are people buried?

Page 9: Anthropological Research

Why Questions• Why do people believe in . . . ?• Why do people do . . . ?• Why was agriculture invented?• Why are pots decorated?• Why did states emerge?

Page 10: Anthropological Research

How Questions• How was Australia colonized?• How did the Indo European

language spread?• How did human culture emerge?• How do people classify . . .?• How does globalization affect local

culture?

Page 11: Anthropological Research

Scale• Global view – big picture processes• Temporal view – periods, phases• Regional view – social networks,

territories• Local view – neighborhood• Site/Village view – structure,

context• Individual view – life history, types

Page 12: Anthropological Research

Global View• Climate, soils, topography,

ecological zones, isolation, ocean currents

• Data on cultures, nations – demography, economy, ideology

• Broad patterns between global characteristics and culture

Page 13: Anthropological Research

Temporal View• Archaeological time/space charts

spanning millennia• Historical timelines spanning

centuries• Generational data• Life history data

Page 14: Anthropological Research

Regional View• Environmental variability at

regional level – rivers, mountains, vegetation, ecological communities

• Locations of sites/villages• Characteristics of sites/villages

Page 15: Anthropological Research

Site/Village View• Site neighborhood• Location of structures, features,

artifact clusters• Household composition• Variability

Page 16: Anthropological Research

Household View• Location (within village/site)• Pattern of structures, features, and

activity areas• Comparison with other households

Page 17: Anthropological Research

Individual View• Physiology, genetic makeup,

skeletal characteristics• Life history• Statuses and roles• Decision making• Belief system

Page 18: Anthropological Research

Individual (Artifact) View• Group (classification)• Composition• Properties – size, shape, color,

quality, wear, breakage, material, Style vs. Function

Page 19: Anthropological Research

Models• A model uses a theory to develop

expectations about what kinds of patterns we will find in the data

• Models use theories and operational arguments to tell us what is important in the data

• Statistics can help evaluate the fit between model and data

Page 20: Anthropological Research

Evaluation• Must check reasoning from theory

to model• Must check operational arguments

and proxy measures• Must check data gathering process• Must check role of formation

processes

Page 21: Anthropological Research

Quantitative Approaches• Estimation and Confirmation

– Sampling– Parametric vs. Non-parametric– Response (Dependent) vs.

Explanatory (Independent) variables (causal models)

• Descriptive– Data Reduction, Pattern Recognition

(Exploratory Data Analysis)

Page 22: Anthropological Research

Kinds of Data• Scales of measurement – nominal,

ordinal, interval, ratio (dichotomy)• Discrete vs. Continuous• Composition/Assemblage

(Percentages)