Sorry for the break. We are back for an update on social science research issues
Bivariate analysis, which explores the relationship between two variables, is a commonly used technique in social science research. However, relying solely on bivariate analysis has some key limitations. A major disadvantage is that it fails to control for potential confounding factors, so it cannot conclusively establish causality between the two variables. Also, by only examining two variables at a time, it overlooks multivariable interactions that may be critical to understanding a social phenomenon. Bivariate relationships identified may be spurious rather than robust when additional variables are considered. Furthermore, bivariate analysis reduces complex social processes down to a simplistic two-variable correlation, sacrificing nuance for parsimony. While useful as an initial, descriptive approach, bivariate techniques have limited ability to explain the myriad forces that shape human society. To gain deeper understanding, social scientists must use more sophisticated mult...
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