Considerations for Collecting Freelists in the Field: Examples from Ethobotany

In freelists, informants create an inventory of all the items they know within a given category. Freelists reveal cultural salience and variation in individuals’ topical knowledge. The ease and accuracy of freelist interviewing makes it ideal for collecting data on local knowledge from relatively large samples. This method, however, does not work well with broad topical areas: People tend to omit some items and cluster responses as they unpack mental subcategories. Successive freelisting can reduce and redefine topics (domains), thus focusing the content of interviews. In oral freelists, interviewers should prevent bystanders from contaminating the informant’s list, and written freelists are advisable in literate communities. Responses from freelists should be cross-checked with informal methods as much as practicable, as in this Caribbean case. With proper attention to detail, freelisting can amass high-quality ethnobotanical data.

[1]  Gery W. Ryan,et al.  Successive Free Listing: Using Multiple Free Lists to Generate Explanatory Models , 2000 .

[2]  Justin M. Nolan Wild Plant Classification in Little Dixie: Variation in a Regional Culture , 2002 .

[3]  Justin M. Nolan PURSUING THE FRUITS OF KNOWLEDGE: COGNITIVE ETHNOBOTANY IN MISSOURI'S LITTLE DIXIE , 2001 .

[4]  H. Bernard,et al.  Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology , 2000 .

[5]  John B. Gatewood Loose Talk: Linguistic Competence and Recognition Ability , 1983 .

[6]  R. D'Andrade Modal Responses and Cultural Expertise , 1987 .

[7]  D. Brewer Cognitive Indicators of Knowledge in Semantic Domains , 1995 .

[8]  G. Gibbon Reasoning with Numbers , 2022 .

[9]  Justin M. Nolan,et al.  Ethnophysiology and herbal treatments of intestinal worms in Dominica, West Indies. , 2002, Journal of ethnopharmacology.

[10]  John B. Gatewood familiarity, vocabulary size, and recognition ability in four semantic domains , 1984 .

[11]  S. Weller Shared Knowledge, Intracultural Variation, and Knowledge Aggregation , 1987 .

[12]  J. J. Smith,et al.  Salience Counts: A Domain Analysis of English Color Terms , 1995 .

[13]  N. Henley A psychological study of the semantics of animal terms , 1969 .

[14]  Stephen P. Borgatti Using ANTHROPAC To Investigate a Cultural Domain , 1990 .

[15]  R. Finerman,et al.  Using home gardens to decipher health and healing in the Andes. , 2003, Medical anthropology quarterly.

[16]  R P Lederman,et al.  Systematic Data Collection: I , 1994, MCN. The American journal of maternal child nursing.

[17]  Marsha B. Quinlan From the Bush: The Front Line of Health Care in a Caribbean Village , 2003 .

[18]  Devon D. Brewer,et al.  Supplementary Interviewing Techniques to Maximize Output in Free Listing Tasks , 2002 .

[19]  Justin M. Nolan,et al.  Cultural Conservation of Medicinal Plant Use in the Ozarks , 1999 .

[20]  S. Borgatti Elicitation techniques for cultural domain analysis , 1999 .

[21]  Christopher A. Furlow Comparing Indicators of Knowledge within and between Cultural Domains , 2003 .

[22]  R. Trotter,et al.  Remedios caseros: Mexican American home remedies and community health problems. , 1981, Social science & medicine. Medical anthropology.

[23]  Justin M. Nolan,et al.  A Measure of Dichotomous Category Bias in Free Listing Tasks' , 1997 .

[24]  M. Alexiades,et al.  Selected Guidelines for Ethnobotanical Research: A Field Manual , 1996 .

[25]  A. Kinghorn Medical Ethnobiology of the Highland Maya of Chiapas, Mexico: The Gastrointestinal Diseases.Elois Ann Berlin , Brent Berlin , 1997 .

[26]  J. W. Hutchinson Expertise and the Structure of Free Recall , 1983 .

[27]  Stephen P. Borgatti,et al.  Reasoning with numbers , 1998 .