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Research question

A research question is "a question that a research project sets out to answer".[1] Choosing a research question is an essential element of both quantitative and qualitative research. Investigation will require data collection and analysis, and the methodology for this will vary widely. Good research questions seek to improve knowledge on an important topic, and are usually narrow and specific.[1]

To form a research question, one must determine what type of study will be conducted such as a qualitative, quantitative, or mixed study. Additional factors, such as project funding, may not only affect the research question itself but also when and how it is formed during the research process. Literature suggests several variations on criteria selection for constructing a research question, such as the FINER or PICOT methods.[2][3][4]

Definition edit

The answer to a research question will help address a research problem or question.[5] Specifying a research question, "the central issue to be resolved by a formal dissertation, thesis, or research project,"[6] is typically one of the first steps an investigator takes when undertaking research. Considerations, such as project funding or methodological approaches may influence the research process, including when and how the research question is developed.[7] Clearly and accurately defining the research question can become an iterative process.[citation needed] How the question is constructed can depend on the type of research or discipline.

Constructing a research question edit

Specifying the research question is one of the first methodological steps the investigator has to take when undertaking research. Having an interest in or knowledge of a particular subject can be useful in the construction of a research question.[8] Formation of the research question is largely determined by, and likewise influences, where and what kind of information will be sought.[9] The research question must be accurately and clearly defined. Choosing a research question is the central element of both quantitative and qualitative research and in some cases it may precede construction of the conceptual framework of study; in all cases, it makes the theoretical assumptions in the framework more explicit and indicates what the researcher wants to know most and first.[citation needed] Therefore, the investigator must first identify the type of study (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) before the research question is developed. Forming the research question may become an iterative process when parameters of the research process, such as field of study or methodology, do not fit the original question. Literature suggests several methods for selecting criteria in the development of a research question, two of which are the FINER and PICO methods.

Construction method examples edit

FINER criteria edit

The FINER[10] method can be a useful tool for outlining research criteria used in the construction of a research question. Due to the flexibility of the criteria, this method may be used for a variety of research scenarios. The FINER method prompts researchers to determine whether one has the means and interest to conduct the study. It also asks one to consider the ethical ramifications, as well as the relevancy of the research.

According to Farrugia et al., the FINER criteria "highlight useful points that may increase the chances of developing a successful research project". These criteria were first suggested in the book Designing Clinical Research by Hulley et al., detailed below.

F – Feasible

  • Adequate number of subjects
  • Adequate technical expertise
  • Affordable in time and money
  • Manageable in scope

I – Interesting

  • Getting the answer intrigues investigator, peers and community

N – Novel

  • Confirms, refutes or extends previous findings

E – Ethical

  • Amenable to a study that institutional review board will approve

R – Relevant

  • To scientific knowledge
  • To clinical and health policy
  • To future research

PICOT criteria edit

PICOT criteria[7] tend to be used to frame questions used in evidence-based studies, such as medical studies. Such research may focus on assessment or evaluation of patients or problems, as well as what may be the causal factor(s) with control and experimental groups.[citation needed]

P – Patient (or Problem)

I – Intervention (or Indicator)

C – Comparison group

O – Outcomes

T – Time

Continuing the research process, the investigator then carries out the research necessary to answer the research question, whether this involves reading secondary sources over a few days for an undergraduate term paper or carrying out primary research over years for a major project. When the research is complete and the researcher knows the (probable) answer to the research question, writing up can begin (as distinct from writing notes, which is a process that goes on through a research project). In term papers, the answer to the question is normally given in summary in the introduction in the form of a thesis statement.

Aggregated research questions and coordination edit

Scientists often communicate open research questions. Sometimes such questions are crowdsourced and/or aggregated, sometimes supplemented with priorities or other details. A common way open research questions are identified, communicated, established/confirmed and prioritized are their inclusion in scientific reviews of a sub-field or specific research question, including in systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Other channels include reports by science journalists and dedicated (sub-)websites such as 80000hours.org's "research questions by discipline"[11] or the Wikipedia articles of the lists of unsolved problems,[12][13][14] aggregative/integrative studies,[12] as well as unsolved online posts on Q&A websites and forums, sometimes categorized/marked as unsolved.[15][additional citation(s) needed] There have been online surveys used to generate priority research topics which were then classified into broader themes.[16] Such may improve research relevance and value[17] or strengthen rationale for societal dedication of limited resources or expansions of the limited resources or for funding a specific study.[citation needed]

Prioritization and evaluations edit

In terms of priorities and related concepts, the proposed strategy of differential technological development suggests research to focus primarily on questions and tools that are thought to increase safety and mitigate issues rather than risky technologies which are instead best to delay.[18][19] Concerning control strategies for gene drives, researchers have however cautioned that such may lead to a counterproductive false sense of security.[20] Not all technological progress may be beneficial in general or in contemporary contexts (environments or systems) and various research may for example result in engineered pandemics.[21]

Many studies "ask uninteresting research questions, [and] make only marginal contributions".[22] One study suggests that while research on climate change "is valuable, it does not tackle head-on the most urgent question: how to change society to mitigate climate change right now".[23] In the ethical framework of effective altruism, research questions with the greatest potential benefits from investments (not necessarily of financial nature) are identified to maximize research benefits.[24] 80,000 Hours has compiled a small list of "Research questions that could have a big social impact, organised by discipline".[11] In public health research, "it is vital that research questions posed are important and that funded research meets a research need or a gap in evidence".[25]

ICTs, participation and routine procedures edit

Platforms, e.g. citizen science ones, can "support identification of problems, formulation of research questions, and study design".[26] Participatory research can "improve study outcomes and foster greater data accessibility and utility as well as increase public transparency".[27] Participants can have continued discussions and iterations regarding new questions.[28] Research questions can be or are positioned at varying levels of detail – from broad to very specific questions – which are semantically or can be displayed as nested – for instance via category trees.[additional citation(s) needed] In one platform, about invasion science and based on Wikidata, users "can zoom into the major research questions and hypotheses" of the field, "which are connected to the relevant studies published in the field and, if available, the underlying raw data" with tools like the Wikimedia project Scholia.[29] Individuals "who can ask novel, field-altering questions" may vary from "those who can answer them" or vary per question.[30] Translation of a (societal) problem "from its meaning in an everyday context into a scientifically valid research question means defining the goals of research in such a way that their contribution to practical solutions of a societal problem is narrow enough to be useful".[31] Both everyday practical knowledge and scientific knowledge play a role in this process.[31] In interdisciplinary research, integration "takes place at the level of the posing of research questions in the overlapping areas between various disciplines".[31] There is research into enabling presenting scholarly knowledge "flexibly enriched with contextual information" for specific research questions.[32]

Identification of open research questions may be useful for the adoption and application of science in society and accelerating specific research and development. There has been a suggestion for establishing a public non-profit organization that would identify "gaps in the science that need addressing", referring to the field of sustainable food system.[33]

Examples and breadth of "research questions" edit

Similar to outlining open research questions, there have also been proposals to e.g. combine specific fields or sources of data and knowledge as the subject or method of new research[34] or to engage more and more scientifically in specific research topics along with the establishment of new high-quality data gathering systems.[35][36] One approach for the generation of research questions is [identifying, highlighting, and] challenging assumptions of existing theories and studies.[37]

Sometimes research questions overlap with or also refer to challenges of a specific theory or field such as how to solve known problems with the Standard Model. Research issues and knowledge gaps can also overlap or be synonymous.

Examples of lists of open significant research questions in reviews include a list of "major outstanding questions" for (applied) human life extension,[34] "fundamental" research questions in subterranean biology,[38] open research questions for digital twins (across fields),[39] open questions in performance measurement of sustainable supply chains,[40] knowledge gaps in antimicrobial resistance,[41] and unaddressed or neglected questions in the literature about 100% renewable energy systems.[42]

Types and purpose edit

The research question serves two purposes

  1. It determines where and what kind of research the writer will be looking for.[43]
  2. It identifies the specific objectives the study or paper will address.

Therefore, the writer must first identify the type of study (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) before the research question is developed.

Qualitative study edit

A qualitative study[43] seeks to learn why or how, so the writer's research must be directed at determining the what, why and how of the research topic. Therefore, when crafting a research question for a qualitative study, the writer will need to ask a why or how question about the topic. For example: How did the company successfully market its new product? The sources needed for qualitative research typically include print and internet texts (written words), audio and visual media.

Here is Creswell's (2009) example of a script for a qualitative research central question:

  • _________ (How or what) is the _________ ("story for" for narrative research; "meaning of" the phenomenon for phenomenology; "theory that explains the process of" for grounded theory; "culture-sharing pattern" for ethnography; "issue" in the "case" for case study) of _________ (central phenomenon) for _________ (participants) at _________ (research site).

Quantitative study edit

A quantitative study[43] seeks to learn where, or when, so the writer's research must be directed at determining the where, or when of the research topic. Therefore, when crafting a research question for a quantitative study, the writer will need to ask a where, or when question about the topic. For example: Where should the company market its new product? Unlike a qualitative study, a quantitative study is mathematical analysis of the research topic, so the writer's research will consist of numbers and statistics.

Here is Creswell's (2009) example of a script for a quantitative research question:

  • Does _________ (name the theory) explain the relationship between _________ (independent variable) and _________ (dependent variable), controlling for the effects of _________ (control variable)?

Alternatively, a script for a quantitative null hypothesis might be as follows:

  • There is no significant difference between _________ (the control and experimental groups on the independent variable) on _________ (dependent variable).

Quantitative studies also fall into two categories:

  1. Correlational studies: A correlational study is non-experimental, requiring the writer to research relationships without manipulating or randomly selecting the subjects of the research. The research question for a correlational study may look like this: What is the relationship between long-distance commuters and eating disorders?
  2. Experimental studies: An experimental study is experimental in that it requires the writer to manipulate and randomly select the subjects of the research. The research question for an experimental study may look like this: Does the consumption of fast food lead to eating disorders?

Mixed study edit

A mixed study[43] integrates both qualitative and quantitative studies, so the writer's research must be directed at determining the why or how and the what, where, or when of the research topic. Therefore, the writer will need to craft a research question for each study required for the assignment. A typical study may be expected to have between 1 and 6 research questions.

Once the writer has determined the type of study to be used and the specific objectives the paper will address, the writer must also consider whether the research question passes the "so what" test. The "so what" test means that the writer must construct evidence to convince the audience why the research is expected to add new or useful knowledge to the literature.

Related terms edit

Problematique edit

Problematique is a term that functions analogously to the research problem or question used typically when addressing global systemic problems. The term achieved prominence in 1970 when Hasan Özbekhan, Erich Jantsch and Alexander Christakis conceptualized the original prospectus of the Club of Rome titled "The Predicament of Mankind".[44] In this prospectus the authors designated 49 Continuous Critical Problems facing humankind, saying "We find it virtually impossible to view them as problems that exist in isolation – or as problems capable of being solved in their own terms... It is this generalized meta system of problems, which we call the 'problematique' that inheres in our situation."

Situations similar to the global problematique in their complexity are also called problematiques. These situations receive different designations from other authors. In organizational theory and related fields, researchers C. West Churchman, Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber, and Chris Argyris[45] called these situations wicked problems; Russell Ackoff called them "messes".

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Santos CM da C, Pimenta CA de M, Nobre MRC. The PICO strategy for the research question construction and evidence search. Revista latino-americana de enfermagem. 2007;15(3):508–511.
  3. ^ Boudin F, Nie J-Y, Dawes M. Clinical information retrieval using document and PICO structure. In: Human Language Technologies: The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics. Association for Computational Linguistics; 2010. p. 822–830.
  4. ^ Bhattacharya S. Journal club and post-graduate medical education. Indian J Plast Surg. 2017 Dec;50(3):302–5.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Developing a Research Question

research, question, research, question, question, that, research, project, sets, answer, choosing, research, question, essential, element, both, quantitative, qualitative, research, investigation, will, require, data, collection, analysis, methodology, this, w. A research question is a question that a research project sets out to answer 1 Choosing a research question is an essential element of both quantitative and qualitative research Investigation will require data collection and analysis and the methodology for this will vary widely Good research questions seek to improve knowledge on an important topic and are usually narrow and specific 1 To form a research question one must determine what type of study will be conducted such as a qualitative quantitative or mixed study Additional factors such as project funding may not only affect the research question itself but also when and how it is formed during the research process Literature suggests several variations on criteria selection for constructing a research question such as the FINER or PICOT methods 2 3 4 Contents 1 Definition 2 Constructing a research question 2 1 Construction method examples 2 1 1 FINER criteria 2 1 2 PICOT criteria 3 Aggregated research questions and coordination 3 1 Prioritization and evaluations 3 2 ICTs participation and routine procedures 3 3 Examples and breadth of research questions 4 Types and purpose 4 1 Qualitative study 4 2 Quantitative study 4 3 Mixed study 5 Related terms 5 1 Problematique 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinition editThe answer to a research question will help address a research problem or question 5 Specifying a research question the central issue to be resolved by a formal dissertation thesis or research project 6 is typically one of the first steps an investigator takes when undertaking research Considerations such as project funding or methodological approaches may influence the research process including when and how the research question is developed 7 Clearly and accurately defining the research question can become an iterative process citation needed How the question is constructed can depend on the type of research or discipline Constructing a research question editSpecifying the research question is one of the first methodological steps the investigator has to take when undertaking research Having an interest in or knowledge of a particular subject can be useful in the construction of a research question 8 Formation of the research question is largely determined by and likewise influences where and what kind of information will be sought 9 The research question must be accurately and clearly defined Choosing a research question is the central element of both quantitative and qualitative research and in some cases it may precede construction of the conceptual framework of study in all cases it makes the theoretical assumptions in the framework more explicit and indicates what the researcher wants to know most and first citation needed Therefore the investigator must first identify the type of study qualitative quantitative or mixed before the research question is developed Forming the research question may become an iterative process when parameters of the research process such as field of study or methodology do not fit the original question Literature suggests several methods for selecting criteria in the development of a research question two of which are the FINER and PICO methods Construction method examples edit FINER criteria edit The FINER 10 method can be a useful tool for outlining research criteria used in the construction of a research question Due to the flexibility of the criteria this method may be used for a variety of research scenarios The FINER method prompts researchers to determine whether one has the means and interest to conduct the study It also asks one to consider the ethical ramifications as well as the relevancy of the research According to Farrugia et al the FINER criteria highlight useful points that may increase the chances of developing a successful research project These criteria were first suggested in the book Designing Clinical Research by Hulley et al detailed below F FeasibleAdequate number of subjects Adequate technical expertise Affordable in time and money Manageable in scopeI Interesting Getting the answer intrigues investigator peers and communityN Novel Confirms refutes or extends previous findingsE Ethical Amenable to a study that institutional review board will approveR Relevant To scientific knowledge To clinical and health policy To future research PICOT criteria edit PICOT criteria 7 tend to be used to frame questions used in evidence based studies such as medical studies Such research may focus on assessment or evaluation of patients or problems as well as what may be the causal factor s with control and experimental groups citation needed P Patient or Problem I Intervention or Indicator C Comparison groupO Outcomes T TimeContinuing the research process the investigator then carries out the research necessary to answer the research question whether this involves reading secondary sources over a few days for an undergraduate term paper or carrying out primary research over years for a major project When the research is complete and the researcher knows the probable answer to the research question writing up can begin as distinct from writing notes which is a process that goes on through a research project In term papers the answer to the question is normally given in summary in the introduction in the form of a thesis statement Aggregated research questions and coordination editFurther information Metascience See also Open problem and Further research is needed Scientists often communicate open research questions Sometimes such questions are crowdsourced and or aggregated sometimes supplemented with priorities or other details A common way open research questions are identified communicated established confirmed and prioritized are their inclusion in scientific reviews of a sub field or specific research question including in systematic reviews and meta analyses Other channels include reports by science journalists and dedicated sub websites such as 80000hours org s research questions by discipline 11 or the Wikipedia articles of the lists of unsolved problems 12 13 14 aggregative integrative studies 12 as well as unsolved online posts on Q amp A websites and forums sometimes categorized marked as unsolved 15 additional citation s needed There have been online surveys used to generate priority research topics which were then classified into broader themes 16 Such may improve research relevance and value 17 or strengthen rationale for societal dedication of limited resources or expansions of the limited resources or for funding a specific study citation needed Prioritization and evaluations edit See also Science policy Philosophy of science List of causes of death by rate Quality adjusted life year Intergenerational equity Sustainability and Risk In terms of priorities and related concepts the proposed strategy of differential technological development suggests research to focus primarily on questions and tools that are thought to increase safety and mitigate issues rather than risky technologies which are instead best to delay 18 19 Concerning control strategies for gene drives researchers have however cautioned that such may lead to a counterproductive false sense of security 20 Not all technological progress may be beneficial in general or in contemporary contexts environments or systems and various research may for example result in engineered pandemics 21 Many studies ask uninteresting research questions and make only marginal contributions 22 One study suggests that while research on climate change is valuable it does not tackle head on the most urgent question how to change society to mitigate climate change right now 23 In the ethical framework of effective altruism research questions with the greatest potential benefits from investments not necessarily of financial nature are identified to maximize research benefits 24 80 000 Hours has compiled a small list of Research questions that could have a big social impact organised by discipline 11 In public health research it is vital that research questions posed are important and that funded research meets a research need or a gap in evidence 25 ICTs participation and routine procedures edit See also List of environmental issues Technology and society and Problem solving Collective problem solving Platforms e g citizen science ones can support identification of problems formulation of research questions and study design 26 Participatory research can improve study outcomes and foster greater data accessibility and utility as well as increase public transparency 27 Participants can have continued discussions and iterations regarding new questions 28 Research questions can be or are positioned at varying levels of detail from broad to very specific questions which are semantically or can be displayed as nested for instance via category trees additional citation s needed In one platform about invasion science and based on Wikidata users can zoom into the major research questions and hypotheses of the field which are connected to the relevant studies published in the field and if available the underlying raw data with tools like the Wikimedia project Scholia 29 Individuals who can ask novel field altering questions may vary from those who can answer them or vary per question 30 Translation of a societal problem from its meaning in an everyday context into a scientifically valid research question means defining the goals of research in such a way that their contribution to practical solutions of a societal problem is narrow enough to be useful 31 Both everyday practical knowledge and scientific knowledge play a role in this process 31 In interdisciplinary research integration takes place at the level of the posing of research questions in the overlapping areas between various disciplines 31 There is research into enabling presenting scholarly knowledge flexibly enriched with contextual information for specific research questions 32 Identification of open research questions may be useful for the adoption and application of science in society and accelerating specific research and development There has been a suggestion for establishing a public non profit organization that would identify gaps in the science that need addressing referring to the field of sustainable food system 33 Examples and breadth of research questions edit Similar to outlining open research questions there have also been proposals to e g combine specific fields or sources of data and knowledge as the subject or method of new research 34 or to engage more and more scientifically in specific research topics along with the establishment of new high quality data gathering systems 35 36 One approach for the generation of research questions is identifying highlighting and challenging assumptions of existing theories and studies 37 Sometimes research questions overlap with or also refer to challenges of a specific theory or field such as how to solve known problems with the Standard Model Research issues and knowledge gaps can also overlap or be synonymous Examples of lists of open significant research questions in reviews include a list of major outstanding questions for applied human life extension 34 fundamental research questions in subterranean biology 38 open research questions for digital twins across fields 39 open questions in performance measurement of sustainable supply chains 40 knowledge gaps in antimicrobial resistance 41 and unaddressed or neglected questions in the literature about 100 renewable energy systems 42 Types and purpose editThe research question serves two purposes It determines where and what kind of research the writer will be looking for 43 It identifies the specific objectives the study or paper will address Therefore the writer must first identify the type of study qualitative quantitative or mixed before the research question is developed Qualitative study edit A qualitative study 43 seeks to learn why or how so the writer s research must be directed at determining the what why and how of the research topic Therefore when crafting a research question for a qualitative study the writer will need to ask a why or how question about the topic For example How did the company successfully market its new product The sources needed for qualitative research typically include print and internet texts written words audio and visual media Here is Creswell s 2009 example of a script for a qualitative research central question How or what is the story for for narrative research meaning of the phenomenon for phenomenology theory that explains the process of for grounded theory culture sharing pattern for ethnography issue in the case for case study of central phenomenon for participants at research site Quantitative study edit A quantitative study 43 seeks to learn where or when so the writer s research must be directed at determining the where or when of the research topic Therefore when crafting a research question for a quantitative study the writer will need to ask a where or when question about the topic For example Where should the company market its new product Unlike a qualitative study a quantitative study is mathematical analysis of the research topic so the writer s research will consist of numbers and statistics Here is Creswell s 2009 example of a script for a quantitative research question Does name the theory explain the relationship between independent variable and dependent variable controlling for the effects of control variable Alternatively a script for a quantitative null hypothesis might be as follows There is no significant difference between the control and experimental groups on the independent variable on dependent variable Quantitative studies also fall into two categories Correlational studies A correlational study is non experimental requiring the writer to research relationships without manipulating or randomly selecting the subjects of the research The research question for a correlational study may look like this What is the relationship between long distance commuters and eating disorders Experimental studies An experimental study is experimental in that it requires the writer to manipulate and randomly select the subjects of the research The research question for an experimental study may look like this Does the consumption of fast food lead to eating disorders Mixed study edit A mixed study 43 integrates both qualitative and quantitative studies so the writer s research must be directed at determining the why or how and the what where or when of the research topic Therefore the writer will need to craft a research question for each study required for the assignment A typical study may be expected to have between 1 and 6 research questions Once the writer has determined the type of study to be used and the specific objectives the paper will address the writer must also consider whether the research question passes the so what test The so what test means that the writer must construct evidence to convince the audience why the research is expected to add new or useful knowledge to the literature Related terms editProblematique edit Problematique is a term that functions analogously to the research problem or question used typically when addressing global systemic problems The term achieved prominence in 1970 when Hasan Ozbekhan Erich Jantsch and Alexander Christakis conceptualized the original prospectus of the Club of Rome titled The Predicament of Mankind 44 In this prospectus the authors designated 49 Continuous Critical Problems facing humankind saying We find it virtually impossible to view them as problems that exist in isolation or as problems capable of being solved in their own terms It is this generalized meta system of problems which we call the problematique that inheres in our situation Situations similar to the global problematique in their complexity are also called problematiques These situations receive different designations from other authors In organizational theory and related fields researchers C West Churchman Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber and Chris Argyris 45 called these situations wicked problems Russell Ackoff called them messes See also editBold hypothesis Design of experiments Hypothesis Inquiry Research design Problem finding Problem shaping Problem structuring methodsReferences edit a b Mattick Karen Johnston Jenny de la Croix Anne 2018 How to write a good research question The Clinical Teacher 15 2 104 108 doi 10 1111 tct 12776 PMID 29575667 S2CID 4360924 Santos CM da C Pimenta CA de M Nobre MRC The PICO strategy for the research question construction and evidence search Revista latino americana de enfermagem 2007 15 3 508 511 Boudin F Nie J Y Dawes M Clinical information retrieval using document and PICO structure In Human Language Technologies The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics Association for Computational Linguistics 2010 p 822 830 Bhattacharya S Journal club and post graduate medical education Indian J Plast Surg 2017 Dec 50 3 302 5 Booth Wayne C Colomb Gregory G Williams Joseph M Bizup Joseph Fitzgerald William T 1995 The Craft of Research Chicago IL The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 06565 0 Duignan John 2016 Research question A Dictionary of Business Research Methods Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780191792236 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 179223 6 archived from the original on 6 December 2021 retrieved 2 July 2019 a b Haynes R Brian 1 September 2006 Forming research questions Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 59 9 881 886 doi 10 1016 j jclinepi 2006 06 006 ISSN 0895 4356 PMC 7125967 PMID 16895808 Farrugia Patricia 2010 Practical tips for surgical research Research questions hypotheses and objectives Canadian Journal of Surgery 53 4 278 81 PMC 2912019 PMID 20646403 Creswell John W 2014 Research design qualitative quantitative and mixed methods approaches 4th ed Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4522 2609 5 OCLC 815758208 Designing clinical research Hulley Stephen B 3rd ed Philadelphia PA Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins 2007 ISBN 978 0 7817 8210 4 OCLC 71223173 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Research questions that could have a big social impact organised by discipline 80 000 Hours Archived from the original on 31 August 2022 Retrieved 31 August 2022 a b Coley Alan A 30 August 2017 Open problems in mathematical physics Physica Scripta 92 9 093003 arXiv 1710 02105 Bibcode 2017PhyS 92i3003C doi 10 1088 1402 4896 aa83c1 ISSN 0031 8949 S2CID 3892374 Adolphs Ralph 1 April 2015 The unsolved problems of neuroscience Trends in Cognitive Sciences 19 4 173 175 doi 10 1016 j tics 2015 01 007 ISSN 1364 6613 PMC 4574630 PMID 25703689 As for Hilbert s problems there is a Wikipedia entry for unsolved problems in neuroscience there are more popular writings and there are books In trying to brainstorm a list of my own I read the above sources and asked around This yields a predictable list ranging from how can we cure psychiatric illness to what is consciousness Box 1 Asking Caltech faculty added entries about how networks function and what neural computation is Caltech students had things figured out and got straight to the point how can I sleep less how can we save our species can we become immortal Dev Sukhendu B 1 March 2015 Unsolved problems in biology The state of current thinking Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology 117 2 232 239 doi 10 1016 j pbiomolbio 2015 02 001 ISSN 0079 6107 PMID 25687284 Among many of the responses I received a large majority mentioned several aspects of neuroscience This is not surprising since the brain remains the most uncharted area in humans A list of unsolved problems in neuroscience can be found in http en wikipedia org wiki List of unsolved 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ISSN 0363 7425 Mammola Stefano Amorim Isabel R Bichuette Maria E Borges Paulo A V Cheeptham Naowarat Cooper Steven J B Culver David C Deharveng Louis Eme David Ferreira Rodrigo Lopes Fiser Cene Fiser Ziga Fong Daniel W Griebler Christian Jeffery William R Jugovic Jure Kowalko Johanna E Lilley Thomas M Malard Florian Manenti Raoul Martinez Alejandro Meierhofer Melissa B Niemiller Matthew L Northup Diana E Pellegrini Thais G Pipan Tanja Protas Meredith Reboleira Ana Sofia P S Venarsky Michael P Wynne J Judson Zagmajster Maja Cardoso Pedro December 2020 Fundamental research questions in subterranean biology Biological Reviews 95 6 1855 1872 doi 10 1111 brv 12642 hdl 10138 333518 ISSN 1464 7931 PMID 32841483 S2CID 221327219 Sharma Angira Kosasih Edward Zhang Jie Brintrup Alexandra Calinescu Anisoara 8 August 2022 Digital Twins State of the art theory and practice challenges and open research questions Journal of Industrial Information Integration 30 100383 arXiv 2011 02833 doi 10 1016 j jii 2022 100383 ISSN 2452 414X S2CID 226254582 Tajbakhsh Alireza Hassini Elkafi 1 January 2015 Performance measurement of sustainable supply chains a review and research questions International Journal of Productivity and Performance Management 64 6 744 783 doi 10 1108 IJPPM 03 2013 0056 ISSN 1741 0401 Hamers Raph L Cassini Alessandro Asadinia Koe Stella Bertagnolio Silvia 1 June 2022 Developing a priority global research agenda for antimicrobial resistance in the human health sector protocol for a scoping review BMJ Open 12 6 e060553 doi 10 1136 bmjopen 2021 060553 ISSN 2044 6055 PMC 9163534 PMID 35654465 Breyer Christian Khalili Siavash Bogdanov Dmitrii Ram Manish Oyewo Ayobami Solomon Aghahosseini Arman Gulagi Ashish Solomon A A Keiner Dominik Lopez Gabriel Ostergaard Poul Alberg Lund Henrik Mathiesen Brian V Jacobson Mark Z Victoria Marta Teske Sven Pregger Thomas Fthenakis Vasilis Raugei Marco Holttinen Hannele Bardi Ugo Hoekstra Auke Sovacool Benjamin K 2022 On the History and Future of 100 Renewable Energy Systems Research IEEE Access 10 78176 78218 doi 10 1109 ACCESS 2022 3193402 ISSN 2169 3536 a b c d Creswell John W 2014 Research design qualitative quantitative and mixed methods approaches 4th ed Thousand Oaks SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4522 2609 5 Archived from the original on 16 November 2023 Retrieved 12 December 2018 The Predicament of Mankind PDF sunsite utk edu 1970 Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 24 August 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Argyris C 1968 Some Unintended Consequences of Rigorous Research Psychological Bulletin pp 185 197 Further reading editThe Little Brown Guide to Writing Research Papers White Patrick 2017 Developing Research Questions 2nd ed Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 49047 6 Creswell John W 2014 Research design qualitative quantitative and mixed methods approaches 4th ed Thousand Oaks SAGE Publications pp 131 133 ISBN 978 1 4522 2609 5 External links edit nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Research question Developing a Research Question Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Research question amp oldid 1195782978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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