✨ Transforms Filters: Tracing paths

Tracing paths

Path tracing in Causal Map 3 is a cool feature to look at how one factor affects another further down (or up) a causal story and is a useful way of looking at a specific part of a causal map.
 
How to use
🔍 Start path tracing: Click on the Transforms Filters panel and select the 'trace paths' filter.
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➡️ Define your path: Specify the starting and ending factors for the path you want to trace. You can leave the end field blank to show all paths leading from a factor, or leave the start field blank to show all paths leading to a factor.
🔢 Set the steps: Choose the number of steps (or links) to include in your traced path. Increasing this number will broaden the results by including longer paths. But keep in mind that, when you’re analysing interviews, people usually don’t report causal chains longer than 4 steps.
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The factors which match the filter are shown with thicker borders.
 
Tips for Success💡:
🗺️ Simplify your map: Consider applying other filters beforehand to format and simplify your map before tracing paths.
⛓️ Avoid the transitivity trap: Be careful when drawing conclusions. The presence of links from A to B and B to C does not automatically mean that all respondents indirectly connect A to C: some may have mentioned only A to B and others only mentioned B to C. To avoid this trap, you can trace individual respondents’ threads within the paths, which filters to show only continuous chains of links from the same source to avoid the transitivity trap issue.
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In most cases, we should always trace threads before any filter which changes labels: zooming, removing brackets, combining opposites and autoclustering. See this page for more information.

 
Remember that order matters: the order in which the filters are applied makes a difference.