Field Researcher

Role

Gathers information in real-world settings through observation, interviews, visits, and contextual documentation.

Description

A Field Researcher gathers information in real-world settings rather than only in a studio, lab, or office. They may observe places, interview people, document practices, visit communities, study environments, or collect contextual material.

In immersive media, field research can help the team understand the physical, social, cultural, historical, or emotional setting that a work draws from. It can also reveal details that would be missed if the project were developed only from secondary sources.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within research practice, the Field Researcher brings the project into contact with lived contexts. Their work helps ground creative decisions in real places, people, routines, environments, and conditions.

Scope Note

May include site visits, interviews, observation, photography, field notes, contextual documentation, community contact, environmental research, location records, and synthesis for the creative or production team.

Boundary Note

Field research is different from location scouting or production travel, although these may overlap. Its center is learning from real contexts in a structured and ethical way.

Collaboration Note

Commonly works with directors, writers, producers, designers, documentary researchers, community consultants, subject-matter experts, and ethics researchers.

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