扰乱舞蹈科学研究中客观知识的义务。

IF 1.1 Q3 SPORT SCIENCES Journal of Dance Medicine & Science Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-27 DOI:10.1177/1089313X241245493
Louisa Petts, Ashley McGill
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:迫于资金和管理机构的压力,审计文化侵入了舞蹈医学与科学研究界的言论,导致人们过分关注舞蹈的整体利益的合理化和合法化。本文对这种等级价值体系进行了批判,该体系过分偏向于客观、可推广的定量研究方法,自 1990 年国际舞蹈医学与科学协会(IADMS)成立以来,这种方法在舞蹈医学与科学界仍占主导地位。目的:虽然这可能意味着研究在应用于更广泛的环境时具有可推广性,但客观结果缺乏细化,并不会自动为每个人带来适当、有意义、包容或可获得的舞蹈体验。舞蹈医学与科学研究中的主观、特异、人种学、体现学、现象学和跨学科方法在拓宽、深化和丰富该领域方面具有巨大潜力:本文强调了定性和定量方法之间的紧张关系,主张研究人员可以严格地接受自己的立场,以促进本体论和认识论的清晰,并透明地披露研究人员的任何偏见、假设或期望。本文借鉴了作为舞蹈科学与医学研究领域一部分的 "健康舞蹈"(DfH)的研究实例,包括但不限于 "帕金森病舞蹈"。本文提供了富有启发性的建议,鼓励研究人员通过在自己的研究中应用以艺术为基础、以人为中心的合作式混合方法,保持想象力和好奇心。
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Disrupting the Obligation of Objective Knowledge in Dance Science Research.

Background: Through pressure from funding and governing bodies, an audit culture invades the rhetoric of the dance medicine and science research community, leading to undue focus on justifying and legitimizing the holistic benefits of dancing. This paper critiques this hierarchical value system which disproportionately favors objective, generalizable, and quantitative research approaches still dominant in dance medicine and science, existing since the founding of the International Association for Dance Medicine and Science (IADMS) in 1990.

Purpose: Whilst this may mean studies are generalizable when applied to broader contexts, objective outcomes lack granularity and do not automatically lead to appropriate, meaningful, inclusive, or accessible dance experiences for everyone. Subjective, idiographic, ethnographic, embodied, phenomenological, and transdisciplinary approaches to dance medicine and science research have great potential to broaden, deepen, and enrich the field.

Conclusions: This paper highlights the tensions between qualitative and quantitative methodologies, advocating that researchers can rigorously embrace their positionality to contribute toward ontological and epistemological clarity with any researcher bias, assumption, or expectation transparently disclosed. The writing draws on research examples from Dance for Health (DfH) as a part of dance science and medicine field of study, including but not limited to Dance for Parkinson's. This paper provides resourceful recommendations, encouraging researchers to remain imaginative and curious through application of arts-based, person-centered, collaborative mixed methods within their own studies.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
期刊最新文献
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