Participant Observation A Guide For Fieldworkers

Participant = one who did something during the event. There's a certain sense of mere attendance in the word attendee that makes it so some contemporary events prefer to think of all present as participants. Here, I take it the basic idea is that even if you don't have a specific role, you participate through active listening.

So, first make your work plural: Participants In most cases, making that word possessive is simply a matter of adding the apostrophe to the plural noun: Participants' So, these variations are available: Participant = singular; Participants = Plural; Participant's = singular possessive; Participants' = plural possessive.

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I'm relatively new to academia and I've noticed scientists write "participants" instead of "the participants" in the context of, for example, "participants did this" i...

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What kind of participant? Participating in conducting the experiment or participating in the experiment itself as a subject?

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Participant just indicates involvement. The investigator is also a participant. A respondant indicates not only involvement, but a role or primary activities or responsibilities.

I'd like to reschedule the meeting due to the unavailability of one of the participants. He's an important element for the meeting. I am looking for a sample e-mail to inform all participants that ...

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Is there an idiom for winning a contest because you are the only participant and there is no competitor?

A 'patient' is a person receiving medical care, while a 'subject' (or 'participant') is a person being experimented on. Often the two categories overlap, but not necessarily. For example a trial to ensure that a drug has no side-effects may involve giving it to people who are not sick, in which case they are a subject but not a patient.