@article{oai:seirei-univ.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001039, author = {ポルドニャック, アダム and POLUDNIAK, Adam}, journal = {聖隷クリストファー大学社会福祉学部紀要, Bulletin of the School of Social Work Seirei Christopher University}, month = {Mar}, note = {P(論文), Blogs are to the social scientist what free markets are to the economist: above all a source of authentic data which are impossible to obtain under laboratory conditions, as these are inevitably tainted by the researcher’s wishful thinking. But like free markets they are not without fault: on the one hand they have the potential to lead to an unexpected discovery, owing to the wisdom of crowds; on the other hand they reduce the researcher to a passive observer, because of their hereand-now and resistibility to experiment. Perhaps their greatest value lies in allowing all manner of exploratory study, thus providing clues to more fresh or more thorough research. This pilot study is a modest attempt at demonstrating the usefulness of blogs to the field of speech study, focusing on insights that can be gained from eavesdropping on Japanese bloggers discussing English /l/ and /r/., 研究ノート}, pages = {71--77}, title = {日本人ブロガーの/r/ と/l/ について予備研究}, volume = {12}, year = {2014}, yomi = {ポルドニャック, アダム} }