Getting Through the Gate: Statistical and Methodological Issues Raised in the Reviewing Process

被引:70
|
作者
Green, Jennifer P. [1 ]
Tonidandel, Scott [2 ]
Cortina, Jose M. [1 ]
机构
[1] George Mason Univ, Dept Psychol, 4400 Univ Dr, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA
[2] Davidson Coll, Dept Psychol, Davidson, NC 28036 USA
关键词
qualitative research; method variance; factor analysis; interactions; construct validation procedures; MODERATED MULTIPLE-REGRESSION; EXPLORATORY FACTOR-ANALYSIS; ORGANIZATIONAL-RESEARCH; METHOD VARIANCE; PREDICTOR VARIABLES; METHOD BIAS; MEDIATION; MANAGEMENT; RECOMMENDATIONS; VALIDITY;
D O I
10.1177/1094428116631417
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This study empirically examined the statistical and methodological issues raised in the reviewing process to determine what the gatekeepers of the literature, the reviewers and editors, really say about methodology when making decisions to accept or reject manuscripts. Three hundred and four editors' and reviewers' letters for 69 manuscripts submitted to the Journal of Business and Psychology were qualitatively coded using an iterative approach. Systematic coding generated 267 codes from 1,751 statements that identified common methodological and statistical errors by authors and offered themes across these issues. We examined the relationship between the issues identified and manuscript outcomes. The most prevalent methodological and statistical topics were measurement, control variables, common method variance, factor analysis, and structural equation modeling. Common errors included the choice and comprehensiveness of analyses. This qualitative analysis of methods in reviews provides insight into how current methodological debates reveal themselves in the review process. This study offers guidance and advice for authors to improve the quality of their research and for editors and reviewers to improve the quality of their reviews.
引用
收藏
页码:402 / 432
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [2] Surviving the reviewing process and getting published
    Chanock, Kate
    JOURNAL OF ACADEMIC LANGUAGE AND LEARNING, 2008, 2 (01): : E1 - E4
  • [3] Reply to: "Statistical and methodological issues''
    Shin, Thuzar M.
    Shaikh, Waqas R.
    Etzkorn, Jeremy R.
    Sobanko, Joseph F.
    Margolis, David J.
    Gelfand, Joel M.
    Chu, Emily Y.
    Elenitsas, Rosalie
    Miller, Christopher J.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY, 2017, 77 (04) : E115 - E116
  • [4] Methodological and statistical issues in pharmacogenomics
    Peters, Bas J. M.
    Rodin, Andrei S.
    de Boer, Anthonius
    Maitland-van der Zee, Anke-Hilse
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY, 2010, 62 (02) : 161 - 166
  • [5] The Statistical Analysis of End of Working Life: Methodological and Sociological Issues Raised by the Average Effective Age of Retirement
    Wels, Jacques
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2016, 129 (01) : 291 - 315
  • [6] The Statistical Analysis of End of Working Life: Methodological and Sociological Issues Raised by the Average Effective Age of Retirement
    Jacques Wels
    Social Indicators Research, 2016, 129 : 291 - 315
  • [7] Getting through the sleep gate
    Finkbeiner, AK
    SCIENCES-NEW YORK, 1998, 38 (05): : 14 - 18
  • [8] Getting into the gang: Methodological issues in studying ethnic gangs
    Joe, KA
    SUBSTANCE USE & MISUSE, 1997, 32 (12-13) : 1961 - 1966
  • [9] Methodological issues in cardiovascular epidemiology: the risk of determining absolute risk through statistical models
    Panagiotakos, Demosthenes B.
    Stavrinos, Vassilis
    VASCULAR HEALTH AND RISK MANAGEMENT, 2006, 2 (03) : 309 - 315
  • [10] Methodological and statistical issues related to analysis of survival
    Alizadeh, Ahad
    Morasae, Esmaeil Khedmati
    Almasi-Hashiani, Amir
    LANCET HIV, 2017, 4 (08): : E330 - E330