In scientific methodology, a patchwork refers to a collection of disparate, loosely connected components (e.g., techniques, tools, datasets) that are combined without true integration, coherence, or standardization.

  • Lacks a unifying theoretical or methodological foundation.
  • Combines pre-existing elements without addressing compatibility or interoperability.
  • Often results in inconsistencies, redundancy, or unclear logic.
  • Gives the illusion of completeness while being methodologically fragmented.
  • Describes studies that borrow methods from multiple sources but fail to harmonize them.
  • Indicates poor scientific design, where the framework emerges from necessity or convenience rather than planning.
  • Suggests the work is assembled rather than conceived, undermining originality.
  • patchwork.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 09:22
  • by administrador