Confronta i metodi
Esamina i metodi selezionati fianco a fianco; le righe che differiscono sono evidenziate.
| Intervista Strutturata Longitudinale× | Indagine Longitudinale× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Metodologia delle indagini | Metodologia delle indagini |
| Famiglia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anno di origine≠ | 1970s–present | 1940s (panel survey tradition); longitudinal designs codified mid-20th century |
| Ideatore≠ | Established practice in panel and cohort research; codified in survey methodology literature from the 1970s onward | Established tradition; formalized in social science by Paul Lazarsfeld and colleagues (1940s panel studies) |
| Tipo≠ | Longitudinal quantitative data collection method | Quantitative / mixed-methods survey design |
| Fonte seminale | Menard, S. (2002). Longitudinal Research (2nd ed.). Sage Publications. ISBN: 978-0761922452 | Menard, S. (2002). Longitudinal Research (2nd ed.). Sage Publications. ISBN: 978-0761922292 |
| Alias | panel structured interview, repeated structured interview, longitudinal survey interview, wave-based structured interview | panel survey, repeated-measures survey, longitudinal panel study, wave survey |
| Correlati≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Sintesi≠ | A longitudinal structured interview applies a fixed, standardised interview schedule to the same participants at two or more points in time. By holding the instrument constant across waves, the method enables genuine within-person change to be measured, trends to be tracked, and causal sequences to be examined with far greater confidence than a single cross-sectional interview can provide. It is widely used in panel studies, cohort research, and programme evaluations. | A longitudinal survey collects structured questionnaire data from the same individuals or units at two or more distinct points in time. By tracking the same respondents across waves, researchers can distinguish genuine change from stable individual differences, establish temporal ordering between variables, and model trajectories of attitudes, behaviors, or outcomes in ways that a single cross-sectional snapshot cannot support. |
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