Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding

In psychology, we tend to follow the general logic of falsificationism: we separate the ‘context of discovery’ (how we come up with theories) from the ‘context of justification’ (how we test them). However, when studying human interaction, separating these contexts can lead to theories with low ecol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saul Albert, J. P. de Ruiter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of California Press 2018-07-01
Series:Collabra: Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.collabra.org/articles/132
id doaj-9334927fd8074fc9a9455a8bf7464a80
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9334927fd8074fc9a9455a8bf7464a802020-11-24T21:38:05ZengUniversity of California PressCollabra: Psychology2474-73942018-07-014110.1525/collabra.13292Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological GroundingSaul Albert0J. P. de Ruiter1Tufts University, Medford, MATufts University, Medford, MAIn psychology, we tend to follow the general logic of falsificationism: we separate the ‘context of discovery’ (how we come up with theories) from the ‘context of justification’ (how we test them). However, when studying human interaction, separating these contexts can lead to theories with low ecological validity that do not generalize well to life outside the lab. We propose borrowing research procedures from well-established inductive methodologies in interaction research during the process of discovering new regularities and analyzing natural data without being led by theory. We introduce research procedures including the use of naturalistic study settings, analytic transcription, collections of cases, and data analysis sessions, and illustrate these with examples from a successful cross-disciplinary study. We argue that if these procedures are used systematically and transparently throughout a research cycle, they will lead to more robust and ecologically valid theories about interaction within psychology and, with some adaptation, can enhance the reproducibility of research across many other areas of psychological science.https://www.collabra.org/articles/132experimental psychologyconversation analysismethodologyinteraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saul Albert
J. P. de Ruiter
spellingShingle Saul Albert
J. P. de Ruiter
Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
Collabra: Psychology
experimental psychology
conversation analysis
methodology
interaction
author_facet Saul Albert
J. P. de Ruiter
author_sort Saul Albert
title Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
title_short Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
title_full Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
title_fullStr Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
title_full_unstemmed Improving Human Interaction Research through Ecological Grounding
title_sort improving human interaction research through ecological grounding
publisher University of California Press
series Collabra: Psychology
issn 2474-7394
publishDate 2018-07-01
description In psychology, we tend to follow the general logic of falsificationism: we separate the ‘context of discovery’ (how we come up with theories) from the ‘context of justification’ (how we test them). However, when studying human interaction, separating these contexts can lead to theories with low ecological validity that do not generalize well to life outside the lab. We propose borrowing research procedures from well-established inductive methodologies in interaction research during the process of discovering new regularities and analyzing natural data without being led by theory. We introduce research procedures including the use of naturalistic study settings, analytic transcription, collections of cases, and data analysis sessions, and illustrate these with examples from a successful cross-disciplinary study. We argue that if these procedures are used systematically and transparently throughout a research cycle, they will lead to more robust and ecologically valid theories about interaction within psychology and, with some adaptation, can enhance the reproducibility of research across many other areas of psychological science.
topic experimental psychology
conversation analysis
methodology
interaction
url https://www.collabra.org/articles/132
work_keys_str_mv AT saulalbert improvinghumaninteractionresearchthroughecologicalgrounding
AT jpderuiter improvinghumaninteractionresearchthroughecologicalgrounding
_version_ 1725935528583364608