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  1. There are two types of physical traces: erosion and accretion. Erosion refers to the wearing away, or removal, of material because of a physical activity (e.g., a worn foot path). On the other hand, accretion is the building up of material because of physical activity (e.g., a pile of garbage) (Palys & Atchison, 2014).

  2. Define physical traces and compare them to material artifacts. Outline the differences between manifest content and latent content. Discuss the differences between qualitative and quantitative content analysis. Describe code sheets and their purpose.

  3. Physical traces include such things as worn paths across campus, the materials in a landfill or in someone’s trash can, indentations in furniture, or empty shelves in the grocery store. Examples of material artifacts include video games and video game equipment, sculptures, mementos left on gravestones, housing structures, flyers for an event ...

  4. Physical Traces. Physical trace measures are obtained indirectly—people are not present when the data are collected. Two types of physical traces: Use Traces. Products. Physical Traces. • Use traces: Evidence that remains from the use or nonuse of an item. Example: beverage containers in campus recycling bins (soda, juice, water)

  5. 74 Unobtrusive Methods. This section focuses on how to gather data unobtrusively and what to do with those data once they have been collected. There are a variety of ways of gathering data unobtrusively. For these purposes we will focus on three: content analysis, physical trace, and archival methods. Content analysis.

  6. 8 de abr. de 2024 · Digital traces, like physical traces, are the results of one-off events (see definition of forensic science proposed in SD [2]) and, as such, present a variety of characteristics due to the particular source and environment characteristics (e.g., difference between devices) as well as the transfer processes (e.g., copy-pasting ...

  7. This section focuses on how to gather data unobtrusively and what to do with those data once they have been collected. There are two main ways of gathering data unobtrusively: conducting a content analysis of existing texts and analyzing physical traces of human behavior. We’ll explore both approaches.