Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. research-methodology.net › research-philosophy › ontolOntology - Research-Methodology

    Ontology is the study of the nature of reality and how it relates to social phenomena. Learn about the main ontological positions (objectivism and subjectivism) and how they affect research design and methods in business studies.

  3. Dec 22, 2021 · Learn how philosophy can help you understand and interpret your research in social science, and how it influences your choices and methods. Explore the main branches of philosophy (ontology, epistemology, and philosophical perspectives) and how they apply to your research design, outcomes and interpretation.

  4. Mar 27, 2019 · Ontology is concerned with the existential conditions related to material, social, cultural and political contexts. Hence, the question of relations between epistemology and ontology assumes importance. In other words, relations between knowledge and the context of its production and relations between facts and values have become important issues.

    • Haribabu Ejnavarzala
    • 2019
  5. Feb 19, 2014 · PDF | On Feb 19, 2014, Hashil Al-Saadi published Demystifying Ontology and Epistemology in Research Methods | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate.

    • Hashil Al-Saadi
  6. Formal ontology helps to coordinate research by providing a common vocabulary that can facilitate the comparison and evaluation of data. Learn how to use ontology in research, its benefits, and the resources available from the National Center for Biomedical Ontology.

  7. Ontologies are representational artifacts that are being used in many different ways by researchers in almost every life science discipline. Their use in the annotation of both clinical and experimental data is now a common approach for knowledge representation in support of integrative translational research.

  8. May 17, 2022 · From the perspective of computer science, an ontology has been defined as a shared conceptualization (of the “objects, concepts, and other entities that are assumed to exist” in a particular domain) that is formally specified ( Gruber, 1995, p. 908; Gruber, 1993; see also Studer et al., 1998 ).

  1. People also search for