Diagrams and Relational Maps: The Use of Graphic Elicitation Techniques with Interviewing for Data Collection, Analysis, and Display

Graphic elicitation techniques, which ask research participants to provide visual data representing personal understandings of concepts, experiences, beliefs, or behaviors, can be especially useful in helping participants to express complex or abstract ideas or opinions. The benefits and drawbacks of using graphic elicitation techniques for data collection, data analysis, and data display in qualitative research studies are analyzed using examples from a research study that employed data matrices and relational maps in conjunction with semi-structured interviews. Results from this analysis demonstrate that the use of these combined techniques for data collection facilitates triangulation and helps to establish internal consistency of data, thereby increasing the trustworthiness of the interpretation of that data and lending support to validity and reliability claims. Findings support the notion that graphic elicitation techniques can be highly useful in qualitative research studies at the data collection, the data analysis, and the data reporting stages. For example, this study found that graphic elicitation techniques are especially useful for eliciting data related to emotions and emotional experiences.

[1]  B. Glaser The Constant Comparative Method of Qualitative Analysis , 1965 .

[2]  S. Pink Doing visual ethnography , 2001 .

[3]  C. Cassell,et al.  Essential guide to qualitative methods in organizational research , 2004 .

[4]  N R Lackey,et al.  Combining the analyses of three qualitative data sets in studying young caregivers. , 1997, Journal of advanced nursing.

[5]  E. E. Fields Qualitative content analysis of television news: Systematic techniques , 1988 .

[6]  Richard Procter,et al.  The design and use of a mapping tool as a baseline means of identifying an organization’s active networks 1 , 2007 .

[7]  Jan Reed,et al.  Settling In and Moving On: Transience and Older People in Care Homes , 1998 .

[8]  Catherine Cassell,et al.  Using Data Matrices , 2004 .

[9]  J. Wheeldon,et al.  Mapping Mixed Methods Research: Methods, Measures, and Meaning , 2010 .

[10]  A. Blackwell,et al.  Graphic elicitation: using research diagrams as interview stimuli , 2006 .

[11]  Richard Wollheim,et al.  On Pictorial Representation , 1998 .

[12]  Paul D. Clough,et al.  Easy on that trigger dad: a study of long term family photo retrieval , 2009, Personal and Ubiquitous Computing.

[13]  Sharon Mavin,et al.  Visual images: a technique to surface conceptions of research and researchers , 2006 .

[14]  Yuri Engelhardt,et al.  The Language of Graphics: A Framework for the Analysis of Syntax and Meaning in Maps, Charts and Diagrams , 2002, ILLC dissertation series.

[15]  Léonie J. Rennie,et al.  Children's choice of drawings to communicate their ideas about technology , 1995 .

[16]  Muriah J Umoquit,et al.  A multidisciplinary systematic review of the use of diagrams as a means of collecting data from research subjects: application, benefits and recommendations , 2011, BMC medical research methodology.

[17]  Andrea J. Copeland,et al.  Analysis of public library users' digital preservation practices , 2011, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[18]  Elazar J. Pedhazur,et al.  Measurement, Design, and Analysis: An Integrated Approach , 1994 .

[19]  Pamela M. Bluh,et al.  Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure for Scholarship in the Digital Age , 2009 .

[20]  Samantha Warren,et al.  Participatory visual methods , 2012 .

[21]  Yan Zhang Undergraduate students' mental models of the Web as an information retrieval system , 2008, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[22]  Elena Losina,et al.  Evaluation of exposure-specific risks from two independent samples: A simulation study , 2011, BMC medical research methodology.

[23]  Kerri S. Kearney,et al.  Drawing out emotions: the use of participant-produced drawings in qualitative inquiry , 2004 .

[24]  G W Marsh Refining an emergent life‐style-change theory through matrix analysis , 1990, ANS. Advances in nursing science.

[25]  J. Kari,et al.  Placing the Internet in information source horizons. A study of information seeking by Internet users in the context of self-development , 2004 .

[26]  A. Bagnoli Beyond the standard interview: the use of graphic elicitation and arts-based methods , 2009 .

[27]  Tünde Varga-Atkins,et al.  From drawings to diagrams: maintaining researcher control during graphic elicitation in qualitative interviews , 2009 .

[28]  Jon Oberlander,et al.  A Cognitive Theory of Graphical and Linguistic Reasoning: Logic and Implementation , 1995, Cogn. Sci..

[29]  Marcus Banks,et al.  Visual methods in social research , 2001 .

[30]  Matthew B. Miles,et al.  Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook , 1994 .

[31]  Anselm L. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research : techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory , 1998 .

[32]  William E. Jones,et al.  Context in information behavior research , 2007 .