I have read the paper “The Evolving Mobile
Media: Uses and conceptualizations of the Mobile Internet”, written by Lee
Humphreys, Thilo von Pape and Veronika Karnowski and published in the Journal
of Computer-Mediated Communication.
This study looks at the use of mobile
Internet, and examines whether there are cultural differences in the use and
perception of mobile Internet. By interviewing 21 college students; 11 mobile
Internet users from the U.S. and 10 from Germany.
In this study the authors are using
semi-structured interviews, this means that the same questions were asked to
all the participants and the questions were open. The interviews were conducted
face-to-face, and were held in a separate room with each of the 21
participants. The interviews lasted for about 30 min. The questions dealt with:
where and when they use mobile Internet, how they look at mobile Internet, and
the difference between their use of mobile Internet and the use of Internet on
their computer.
The benefits of this kind of qualitative
research are that you can get thorough information, and with these
semi-structured interviews with open-ended responses you have a higher chance
of getting honest answers. A disadvantage of face-to-face interviews is leaded
questions, depending on how questions are consolidated. In this study the
authors had thought about the importance of the participants feeling relaxed during
the interview, and therefore they hired a person who asked the questions. They
suspected that the participants would feel nervous if one of their professors
were held the interview. I think this is an important thing to keep in mind
when conducting qualitative research, if the participants feel relaxed, it is a
higher chance that the person dares to open up and answer detailed and honestly
to the questions.
Just like I wrote in my last week's blog
post, I think it is best to combine a qualitative study with a quantitative
study, to get many and thorough responses which may facilitate the analysis and
lead to a more accurate result. I also think 21 participants is too little to
build a result on.
Briefly explain to a first year university
student what a case study is.
A case study is based on deep-focused data
collection and examines something specific. This can for instance be an event, behaviour
or an individual. A case study examines, describes or explains a phenomenon. By
examining the problem in depth, it is then easier to understand and analyse the
results.
Use the "Process of Building Theory from
Case Study Research" (Eisenhardt, summarized in Table 1) to analyze the
strengths and weaknesses of your selected paper.
I have read the paper "The Effects of
Piracy Upon the Music Industry: a Case Study of Bootlegging" written by
Lee Marshall and published in the journal Media Culture Society.
This article looks at an area of piracy
known as bootlegging - and discusses how bootlegging can affect the music industry.
The paper describes the distinction between bootlegging and other types of
piracy and then discusses boot leggings effects on the music industry. The
author can not draw clear conclusions from the study, and believes that further
research is needed. The study just presents what the benefits of bootlegging
can be, but to be defined as a good case study, I think it would have required
more evidence.