>David Smilde wrote:
>
>> I would imagine that NVivo does as well.
Susanne Friese wrote:
>You can work with so-called data bites in Nvivo (as I remember the
terminology correctly). This also included video data bites. However the
cutting up of the video has to be done in another programm, it can't be done
in Nvivo itself. You can then incorporate those video data bites within your
data analysis.
>
>Susanne
There is a bit of a difference between these two ways of using and
referring to video in Atlas and Nvivo: - in NVivo as Susanne says - you can
'link' to video databites - a flag from a particular point in a text file
you can code the text file) opens the video clip - but you are not able
to physically code the video clip itself.
In Atlas, and I believe Hyperresearch, as Harald Klein points out, the video
clip can be a 'codeable' data file itself.
Both ways are useful - in Nvivo the linked databite approach shifts the
emphasis to the video clip as 'supporting' a text file(s) where the main
work/commentary/ etc is going on . In Atlas and HyperResearch the video
clip is more of an independent object.
Ann Lewins
Resource Officer, CAQDAS Networking Project
Dept of Sociology
University of Surrey
GUILDFORD GU2 5XH
email: [log in to unmask]
CAQDAS web site: http://www.soc.surrey.ac.uk/caqdas/
Tel +44 (0)1 483 259 455
Fax +44 (0)1 483 259 551
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