Dictionary Definition
research
Noun
1 systematic investigation to establish
facts
2 a search for knowledge; "their pottery deserves
more research than it has received" [syn: inquiry, enquiry]
Verb
2 attempt to find out in a systematically and
scientific manner; "The student researched the history of that
word"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From obsolete French recercher (to search closely), from Old French re-+cerchier (to search).Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɜː(r)tʃ
Noun
- Diligent inquiry or examination to seek or revise facts, principles, theories, applications, et cetera; laborious or continued search after truth.
- A particular instance or piece of research.
Derived terms
- desk research
- empirical research
- field research
- historical research
- primary research
- qualitative research
- quantitative research
- scientific research
- secondary research
Translations
inquiry or examination
- Czech: výzkum
- Finnish: tutkimus
- Hungarian: kutatás
- Japanese: 研究
- Russian: исследование
piece of research
- Finnish: tutkimus, selvitys
- Japanese: 調査
- Russian: исследование
- ttbc Arabic:
- ttbc Bosnian: istraživanje
- ttbc Chinese: 研究 (yánjiū)
- ttbc Dutch: onderzoek , speurwerk
- ttbc French: recherche
- ttbc German: Forschung
- ttbc Interlingua: recerca
- ttbc Italian: ricerca
- ttbc Korean: 연구 (yeon-gu)
- ttbc Portuguese: pesquisa
- ttbc Serbian:
- Cyrillic:
истраживање
- Roman: istraživanje
- Cyrillic:
истраживање
- ttbc Spanish: investigación
- ttbc Swedish: undersökning , forskning
Verb
- to search or examine with continued care; to seek diligently.
- to make an extensive investigation into.
Translations
to examine with continued care
- Finnish: tutkia, selvittää
- Hungarian: kutat
- Japanese: 研究する
- Russian: исследовать (issl'édovat') and
to make an investigation into
- Finnish: tutkia, selvittää
- Japanese: 調査する
- Russian: исследовать (issl'édovat') and
- ttbc Dutch: onderzoeken, uitvissen, uitzoeken, nagaan
- ttbc French: examiner, explorer, fouiller, rechercher
- ttbc German: recherchieren, erforschen
- ttbc Interlingua: recercar
- ttbc Polish: badania
- ttbc Portuguese: buscar, explorar, investigar
- ttbc Spanish: investigar
- ttbc Swedish: undersöka, forska
References
- American Heritage 2000
- Dictionary.com
- WordNet 2003
Extensive Definition
Research is defined as human activity based on
intellectual
application in the investigation of matter. The primary aim for
applied research is discovering,
interpreting,
and the development
of methods and systems for the advancement of human knowledge on a wide variety of
scientific matters of our world and the universe. Research can use
the scientific
method, but need not do so.
Scientific research relies on the application of
the scientific
method, a harnessing of curiosity. This research
provides scientific
information and theories for the explanation of the nature and the properties of the world around
us. It makes practical applications possible. Scientific research
is funded by public authorities, by charitable organisations and by
private groups, including many companies. Scientific research can
be subdivided into different classifications according to their
academic and application disciplines.
Historical research is embodied in the historical
method.
The term research is also used to describe an
entire collection of information about a
particular subject.
Basic research
Basic research (also called fundamental or pure
research) has as its primary objective the advancement of knowledge and the theoretical
understanding of the relations among variables (see statistics). It is exploratory and
often driven by the researcher’s curiosity, interest, and
intuition. It is conducted without any practical end in mind,
although it may have unexpected results pointing to practical
applications. The terms “basic” or “fundamental” indicate that,
through theory generation, basic research provides the foundation
for further, sometimes applied research. As there is no guarantee
of short-term practical gain, researchers may find it difficult to
obtain funding for basic research. Research is a subset of
invention.
Examples of questions asked in basic research:
- Does string theory provide physics with a grand unification theory?
- Which aspects of genomes explain organismal complexity?
- Is it possible to prove or disprove Goldbach's conjecture? (i.e. that every even integer greater than 2 can be written as the sum of two, not necessarily distinct primes)
Traditionally, basic research was considered as
an activity that preceded applied research, which in turn preceded
development into practical applications. Recently, these
distinctions have become much less clear-cut, and it is sometimes
the case that all stages will intermix. This is particularly the
case in fields such as biotechnology and electronics, where
fundamental discoveries may be made alongside work intended to
develop new products, and in areas where public and private sector
partners collaborate in order to develop greater insight into key
areas of interest. For this reason, some now prefer the term
frontier research. ...
Research processes
Scientific research
Generally, research is understood to follow a certain structural process. Though step order may vary depending on the subject matter and researcher, the following steps are usually part of most formal research, both basic and applied:- Formation of the topic
- Hypothesis
- Conceptual definitions
- Operational definitions
- Gathering of data
- Analysis of data
- Test, revising of hypothesis
- Conclusion, iteration if necessary
A common misunderstanding is that by this method
a hypothesis can be proven. Generally a hypothesis is used to make
predictions that can be tested by observing the outcome of an
experiment. If the outcome is inconsistent with the hypothesis,
then the hypothesis is rejected. However, if the outcome is
consistent with the hypothesis, the experiment is said to support
the hypothesis. This careful language is used because researchers
recognize that alternative hypotheses may also be consistent with
the observations. In this sense, a hypothesis can never be proven,
but rather only supported by surviving rounds of scientific testing
and, eventually, becoming widely thought of as true (or better,
predictive), but this is not the same as it having been proven. A
useful hypothesis
allows prediction and within the accuracy of observation of the
time, the prediction will be verified. As the accuracy of
observation improves with time, the hypothesis may no longer
provide an accurate prediction. In this case a new hypothesis will
arise to challenge the old, and to the extent that the new hypothesis makes more
accurate predictions than the old, the new will supplant it.
Historical
The historical method comprises the techniques and guidelines by which historians use historical sources and other evidence to research and then to write history. There are various history guidelines commonly used by historians in their work, under the headings of external criticism, internal criticism, and synthesis. This includes higher criticism and textual criticism. Though items may vary depending on the subject matter and researcher, the following concepts are usually part of most formal historical research:- Identification of origin date
- Evidence of localization
- Recognition of authorship
- Analysis of data
- Identification of integrity
- Attribution of credibility
Research methods
The goal of the research process is to produce new knowledge, which takes three main forms (although, as previously discussed, the boundaries between them may be fuzzy):- Exploratory research, which structures and identifies new problems
- Constructive research, which develops solutions to a problem
- Empirical research, which tests the feasibility of a solution using empirical evidence
Research can also fall into two distinct types:
Research methods used by scholars include:
- Action research
- Cartography
- Case study
- Classification
- Citation Analysis
- Consumer ethnocentrism and CETSCALE
- Content or Textual Analysis
- Delphi method
- Ethnography
- Experience and intuition
- Experiments
- Interviews
- Mathematical models
- Participant observation
- Simulation
- Statistical analysis
- Statistical surveys
- Q methodology
Research is often conducted using the hourglass
model. The hourglass model starts with a broad spectrum for
research, focusing in on the required information through the
methodology of the project (like the neck of the hourglass), then
expands the research in the form of discussion and results.
Publishing
Academic publishing describes a system that is necessary in order for academic scholars to peer review the work and make it available for a wider audience. The 'system', which is probably disorganised enough not to merit the title, varies widely by field, and is also always changing, if often slowly. Most academic work is published in journal article or book form. In publishing, STM publishing is an abbreviation for academic publications in science, technology, and medicine.Most established
academic fields have their own journals and other outlets for
publication, though many academic
journals are somewhat interdisciplinary, and publish work from
several distinct fields or subfields. The kinds of publications
that are accepted as contributions of knowledge or research vary
greatly between fields.
Academic publishing is undergoing major changes,
emerging from the transition from the print to the electronic
format. Business
models are different in the electronic environment. Since about
the early 1990s, licensing of electronic resources, particularly
journals, has been very common. Presently, a major trend,
particularly with respect to scholarly journals, is open access.
There are two main forms of open access: open access publishing, in
which the articles or the whole journal is freely available from
the time of publication, and self-archiving,
where the author makes a copy of their own work freely available on
the web.
Research funding
Most funding for scientific
research comes from two major sources, corporations (through
research
and development departments) and government (primarily through
universities and in some cases through military contractors). Many
senior researchers (such as group leaders) spend more than a
trivial amount of their time applying for grants for research
funds. These grants are necessary not only for researchers to carry
out their research, but also as a source of merit. Some faculty
positions require that the holder has received grants from certain
institutions, such as the US
National Institutes of Health (NIH). Government-sponsored
grants (e.g. from the NIH, the National
Health Service in Britain or any of the European research
councils) generally have a high status.
Etymology
The word research derives from the French recherche, from rechercher, to search closely where "chercher" means "to search" (see French language); its literal meaning is 'to investigate thoroughly'.See also
- Academic conference
- Advertising Research
- Creativity techniques
- Demonstrative evidence
- Due Diligence
- Empirical research
- European Charter for Researchers
- Internet research
- Innovation
- Lab notebook
- List of fields of doctoral studies
- Marketing research
- Open research
- Operations research
- Original research
- Participatory action research
- Psychological research methods
- Research and development
- Social research
- Empirical evidence
- conceptual framework
References
External links
- The US National Library of Medicine
- How to write a research proposal
- The Italian Association for Research
- The Geneva Association (also known as the International Association for the Study of Insurance Economics)
- Industrial Research Institute
- Research Methods Institute
- European Industrial Research Management Association
- The EvaluationWiki
research in Arabic: البحث
research in Aragonese: Imbestigazión
research in Asturian: Investigación
research in Catalan: Investigació
research in Corsican: Ricerca
research in Danish: Forskning
research in German: Forschung
research in Modern Greek (1453-): Έρευνα
επιστημονική
research in Spanish: Investigación
research in Esperanto: Scienca esploro
research in Persian: پژوهش
research in French: Recherche scientifique
research in Friulian: Investigazion
research in Korean: 연구
research in Croatian: Istraživanje
research in Indonesian: Riset
research in Icelandic: Rannsókn
research in Italian: Ricerca scientifica
research in Hebrew: שיטות מחקר
research in Dutch: Onderzoek
research in Japanese: 研究
research in Norwegian: Forskning
research in Norwegian Nynorsk: Forsking
research in Occitan (post 1500): Recèrca
research in Portuguese: Pesquisa
research in Kölsch: Fochsche
research in Quechua: K'uskiykuy
research in Simple English: Research
research in Finnish: Tutkimus
research in Swedish: Forskning
research in Vietnamese: Nghiên cứu
research in Venetian: Ricerca
research in Yiddish: פארשונג
research in Chinese: 研究
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
amassing evidence, analysis, assay, beat the bushes, bring to
test, burrow, check out,
close inquiry, confirm,
cut and try, delve, delve
into, delving,
department of investigation, detection, detective work,
dig, dig into, digging, enquiry, essay, examination, examine, exhaustive study,
experiment, experimentation,
exploration,
explore, fact-finding,
forage, frisk, give a try, give a tryout,
go through, have a go, hearing, hunt, indagation, inquest, inquire into, inquiry, inquisition, inspect, inspection, investigate, investigation,
investigative bureau, legislative investigation, legwork, look around, look
round, look through, nose around, perscrutation, play around
with, poke, poke around,
practice upon, probe,
probing, prove, pry, put to trial, quest, road-test, root, run a sample, sample, scrutinize, scrutiny, search, search through, shake
down, sifting, sleuthing, smell around,
study, substantiate, taste, test, try, try it on, try out, validate, verify,
witch-hunt