A collection of blog notes on perplexity usage: for Housing Studies students
- An introduction to perplexity
- On using perplexity to do literature search and desk research: housing affordability
- A study note on historical geography for housing studies students.
- A study note on political geography: for housing studies students.
- A study note on economic geography: for housing studies students.
- A study note on urban geography: for housing studies students.
- A study note on visual methods in housing research.
- A note on geographical imagination: for housing studies students.
- A note on urban resilience.
- A note on cultural geography for housing studies students.
- A note on reflexivity in the domains of sociology and housing needs.
- A note on sympathy as employed to study homelessness.
- A note on transport geography.
- A note on Gidden's structuration theory.
- A note on domestic violence.
- A note on the personal life perspective.
- A note on the community development theory; related to the task of literature review. also study the related guideline note.
- Some exploratory questions to ask for literature review: on home ownership preference.
- Some examples of hypothesis testing and quantitative data analysis employed in academic journal articles.
- A note on use value and exchange value.
- A note on search costs for housing market study.
- A note on external institutions for housing market study.
- A note on genealogy for housing studies.
- A note on social disorganization for housing studies.
- Formulating research objectives for a dissertation project and the related tasks.
- An exploratory exercise to study the project background of a study: urban redevelopment.
- An exploratory exercise to study the project background of a study: negative home equity.
- An exploratory exercise to study "the manifest and latent functions of home ownership"
- An exploratory study on "the relatedness of social decay and housing affordability".
- An exploratory study on the topic of "urban decay viewed from the housing policy lens".
No comments:
Post a Comment