TY - JOUR
T1 - A practical guide to cross-cultural and multi-sited data collection in the biological and behavioural sciences
AU - Spake, Laure
AU - Hassan, Anushé
AU - Schaffnit, Susan B.
AU - Alam, Nurul
AU - Amoah, Abena S.
AU - Badjie, Jainaba
AU - Cerami, Carla
AU - Crampin, Amelia
AU - Dube, Albert
AU - Kaye, Miranda P.
AU - Kotch, Renee
AU - Liew, Frankie
AU - McLean, Estelle
AU - Munthali-Mkandawire, Shekinah
AU - Mwalwanda, Lusako
AU - Petersen, Anne Cathrine
AU - Prentice, Andrew M.
AU - Zohora, Fatema tuz
AU - Watts, Joseph
AU - Sear, Rebecca
AU - Shenk, Mary K.
AU - Sosis, Richard
AU - Shaver, John H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY - 2024/4/24
Y1 - 2024/4/24
N2 - Researchers in the biological and behavioural sciences are increasingly conducting collaborative, multi-sited projects to address how phenomena vary across ecologies. These types of projects, however, pose additional workflow challenges beyond those typically encountered in single-sited projects. Through specific attention to cross-cultural research projects, we highlight four key aspects of multi-sited projects that must be considered during the design phase to ensure success: (1) project and team management; (2) protocol and instrument development; (3) data management and documentation; and (4) equitable and collaborative practices. Our recommendations are supported by examples from our experiences collaborating on the Evolutionary Demography of Religion project, a mixed-methods project collecting data across five countries in collaboration with research partners in each host country. To existing discourse, we contribute new recommendations around team and project management, introduce practical recommendations for exploring the validity of instruments through qualitative techniques during piloting, highlight the importance of good documentation at all steps of the project, and demonstrate how data management workflows can be strengthened through open science practices. While this project was rooted in cross-cultural human behavioural ecology and evolutionary anthropology, lessons learned from this project are applicable to multi-sited research across the biological and behavioural sciences.
AB - Researchers in the biological and behavioural sciences are increasingly conducting collaborative, multi-sited projects to address how phenomena vary across ecologies. These types of projects, however, pose additional workflow challenges beyond those typically encountered in single-sited projects. Through specific attention to cross-cultural research projects, we highlight four key aspects of multi-sited projects that must be considered during the design phase to ensure success: (1) project and team management; (2) protocol and instrument development; (3) data management and documentation; and (4) equitable and collaborative practices. Our recommendations are supported by examples from our experiences collaborating on the Evolutionary Demography of Religion project, a mixed-methods project collecting data across five countries in collaboration with research partners in each host country. To existing discourse, we contribute new recommendations around team and project management, introduce practical recommendations for exploring the validity of instruments through qualitative techniques during piloting, highlight the importance of good documentation at all steps of the project, and demonstrate how data management workflows can be strengthened through open science practices. While this project was rooted in cross-cultural human behavioural ecology and evolutionary anthropology, lessons learned from this project are applicable to multi-sited research across the biological and behavioural sciences.
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U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1422
DO - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1422
M3 - Article
C2 - 38654647
AN - SCOPUS:85191386315
SN - 0962-8452
VL - 291
JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
IS - 2021
M1 - 20231422
ER -