creators_name: Wallace, Brendan creators_name: Ross, Alastair creators_name: Davies, John editors_name: Jeffers, Tamar type: journalp datestamp: 2003-08-03 lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:55:19 metadata_visibility: show title: The Application of the Hermeneutic Process to Qualitative Safety Data: A Case Study using Data from the CIRAS project ispublished: pub subjects: soc-psy full_text_status: public keywords: accidents; hermeneutics; interpretation; qualitative; quantitative; safety abstract: This article describes the new qualitative methodology developed for use in CIRAS (Confidential Incident Reporting and Analysis System), the confidential database set up for the UK railways by the University of Strathclyde. CIRAS is a project in which qualitative safety data are disidentified and then stored and analysed in a central database. Due to the confidential nature of the data provided, conventional (positivist) methods of checking their accuracy are not applicable; therefore a new methodology was developed - the Applied Hermeneutic Methodology (AHM). Based on Paul Ricoeur's `hermeneutic arc', this methodology uses appropriate computer software to provide a method of analysis that can be shown to be reliable (in the sense that consensus in interpretations between different interpreters can be demonstrated). Moreover, given that the classifiers of the textual elements can be represented in numeric form, AHM crosses the `qualitative-quantitative divide'. 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Understanding computers and cognition: A new foundation for design. Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1986. citation: Wallace, Dr Brendan and Ross, Dr Alastair and Davies, Professor John (2003) The Application of the Hermeneutic Process to Qualitative Safety Data: A Case Study using Data from the CIRAS project. [Journal (Paginated)] document_url: http://cogprints.org/3092/1/hermeneutics.pdf