A new resource aims to help students, lecturers and other scholars develop their skills and navigate the whole research process.
The new Sage Research Methods  which brings together more than 125 hours of content in 484 separate videos, covers everything from planning research projects, designing surveys and collecting data to writing up the results and presenting them to others.
Developed in partnership with an international editorial advisory board of methods experts, the videos include tutorials, expert interviews, case studies and even mini-documentaries about some of the worldâs leading research centres.
Gary King, Albert J. Weatherhead III university professor at Harvard University, discusses âreplication in the social sciencesâ and explains why âarticles and books are just advertisements for the research rather than the research itselfâ.
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It is now essential, he goes on, for âthe data and code thatâs used in support of a published article [to] be made available to the public and to other scientists to be able to validate what theyâre claimingâ. Yet fortunately this is not just a matter of altruism, since âif you make your data available, youâre much more likely to be cited and to be paid attention toâ.
Tyler Vigens, a third-year student at Harvard Law School, explores the strange world of âspurious correlationsâ.
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For anyone who wants to generate one, the basic method is simple: âYou take a variable that you want to correlate [and] compare it to a thousand other variables.â If you try hard enough, youâll eventually discover an apparent correlation between, for example, the annual figures for âthe coffee the average American consumed in cupsâ and âthe Americans that are killed by misusing a hand toolâ â or even âthe number of people who drown by falling into a swimming poolâ and âthe number of films that Nicholas Cage appeared inâ.
Yet correlation is not causation and the graphs that seem to demonstrate these startling links rely on âabusing [the] Y-axesâ and skating over the fact that both trends are âbasically straight linesâ.
And statistician Andy Field, professor of child psychopathology at the University of Sussex â who has pioneered new styles of textbook, including one partly in the form of a graphic novel â has contributed âfour hours of SPSS [Statistical Package for the Social Sciences] trainingâ.
The videos in the collection are browsable by method and video type, and also by disciplines ranging from anthropology, business and criminology to social policy, social work and sociology.
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