Taxonomy development: Difference between revisions
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==Process description== | ==Process description== | ||
<span> <span>This process goes beyond Bailey’s <meta charset="utf-8"><span>three-level indicator model<ref>BAILEY KD (1994) Typologies and Taxonomies – An Introduction to Classification Techniques. Sage, Thousand Oaks, CA.</ref><span></span></span> to combine the conceptualization/deduction and empiricism/induction strategies into a single method that encourages the researcher to use the strategies in an iterative manner to best reach a useful taxonomy. In addition, it includes specific ending conditions that test the taxonomy as it is being developed. This approach is consistent with the design science ‘generate/test cycle’ described by<span>Hevner </span><span>et al<ref>HEVNER AR, MARCH ST, PARK J and RAM S (2004) Design science in information systems research. MIS Quarterly 28(1), 75–105.</ref></span><span>. Finally, it adds the important concept of meta-characteristic that Bailey does not identify explicitly or implicitly.</span></span></span> | |||
==Activity 1== | ==Activity 1== | ||
===Description=== | ===Description=== |
Revision as of 09:30, 21 August 2020
Process description
This process goes beyond Bailey’s <meta charset="utf-8">three-level indicator model[1] to combine the conceptualization/deduction and empiricism/induction strategies into a single method that encourages the researcher to use the strategies in an iterative manner to best reach a useful taxonomy. In addition, it includes specific ending conditions that test the taxonomy as it is being developed. This approach is consistent with the design science ‘generate/test cycle’ described byHevner et al[2]. Finally, it adds the important concept of meta-characteristic that Bailey does not identify explicitly or implicitly.
Activity 1
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Activity 2
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Activity X
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