Metodo

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Series | Book | Chapter

201543

Qualitative methodological issues in studying first-person perspective

Denis Francesconi

pp. 309-321

Abstract

The encounter of Phenomenology and Embodied Cognition Theory has produced a huge debate in contemporary human and social sciences. This debate includes also a discussion on methodological issues, in particular on two topics: the use of first-person data in cognitive science; the use of phenomenological approach in neuroscience (neurophenomenology). The study of consciousness and subjective dimension of human experience has almost never been part of the research agenda of cognitive sciences before the 1990s. However, nowadays, first-person data constitute a remarkable part of scientific research in this field and many others; subjective reports, indeed, are at the base of some experimental studies and of the "big data" approach. In social sciences in general, and in education certainly, we can count on a well-established research tradition built on the phenomenological method, which is probably the most well-known and reliable qualitative method in studying consciousness. In this paper, I will discuss recent methodological proposals and issues arising from the encounter of phenomenology and cognitive sciences, specifically the use of DES method – Descriptive Experience Sampling – and Snapshot method to study in-vivo subjective experiences.

Publication details

Published in:

Brinkmann Malte, Buck Marc Fabian, Rödel Severin Sales (2017) Pädagogik - Phänomenologie: Verhältnisbestimmungen und Herausforderungen. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 309-321

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-658-15743-2_18

Full citation:

Francesconi Denis (2017) „Qualitative methodological issues in studying first-person perspective“, In: M. Brinkmann, M.F. Buck & S.S. Rödel (eds.), Pädagogik - Phänomenologie, Dordrecht, Springer, 309–321.