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Advanced Business Research Method Intructor : Prof. Feng-Hui Huang Agung D. Buchdadi DA21G201.

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Presentation on theme: "Advanced Business Research Method Intructor : Prof. Feng-Hui Huang Agung D. Buchdadi DA21G201."— Presentation transcript:

1 Advanced Business Research Method Intructor : Prof. Feng-Hui Huang Agung D. Buchdadi DA21G201

2 1. Introduction 2. Extent of Bias Caused by Common Method Variance 3. Potential Sources of Common Method Biases 4. Processes Through Which Method Biases Influence Respondent Behavior 5. Techniques for Controlling Common Method Biases 6. Comparison of Statistical Remedies for Common Method Biases 7. Recommendations for Controlling Method Biases in Research Settings 8. Some Additional Considerations 9. Conclusions

3  Interest in the problem of method biases has a long history in the behavioral sciences.  The purpose of this article is to examine the extent to which method biases influence behavioral research results, identify potential sources of method biases, discuss the cognitive processes through which method biases influence responses to measures, evaluate the many different procedural and statistical techniques that can be used to control method biases, and provide recommendations for how to select appropriate procedural and statistical remedies for different types of research settings.

4  Cote and Buckley (1987) found that approximately one quarter (26.3%) of the variance in a typical research measure might be due to systematic sources of measurement error like common method biases.  However, they also found that the amount of variance attributable to method biases varied considerably by discipline and by the type of construct being investigated.  For example, Cote and Buckley (1987) found that, on average, method variance was lowest in the field of marketing (15.8%) and highest in the field of education (30.5%).  They also found that typical job performance measures contained an average of 22.5% method variance, whereas attitude measures contain an average of 40.7%.  It is also noted that the CMV on controlled research is lower than CMV on uncontrolled research

5  Cote and Buckley (1987) indicate that CMV can inflate or deflate the relationship between construct, as shown in table 1

6  Method effects produced by a common source or rater

7  Method effect produced by items context

8  Method effect produced by measurement context

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10  Procedural Remedies 1. Obtain measures of the predictor and criterion variables from different sources 2. Temporal, proximal, psychological, or methodological separation of measurement a.Reducing biases in retrieval stage b.Reducing respondent ability to re”use” previous answer c.Reducing biases in the report stage 3. Protecting respondent anonymity and reducing evaluation apprehension

11 4. Counterbalancing question order 5. Improving scale items a.Define ambiguous or unfamiliar terms b.Avoid vague concepts and provide examples when such concepts must be used; c.Keep questions simple, specific, and concise; d.Avoid double-barreled questions; e.Decompose questions relating to more than one possibility into simpler, more focused questions; f. Avoid complicated syntax. g.eliminate item social desirability and demand characteristics

12  Statistical Remedies 1. Herman’s single-factor test DescriptionExample Include all items from all of the construct in the study into a factor analysis to determine whether the majority of the variance can be accounted for by one general factor

13  Statistical Remedies 2. Partial corellation procedure DescriptionExample Partialling out {social desirability or affectivity; an unrelated “marker variable”; a general method factor} as a surrogate for method variance

14  Statistical Remedies 3. Controlling for the effect of a directly measured latent method factor

15 Statistical remedies 4. Controlling for the effects of an unmeasured latent method factor

16 5. Multiple method factors a. CFA of MTMM model

17 5. Multiple method factors b. Correlated uniqueness model

18 5. Multiple method factors c. Direct product model

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22  Controlling for Method Variance in Experimental Research Examining Mediated Effects Method biases contribute to observed relationship between the mediator and the dependent measure in this research as it is usually obtained from the same object at the same point Using single-common-method-factor approach

23  Controlling for Method Variance in Studies Using Formative Constructs Since in formative construct the characteristic of indicators are different from those in reflective construct, To controll method bias, the researcher must be more careful in designing the research and the procedural controlls, then, are the best way in this matters.

24  This paper provides the process to controll method bias in conducting research in behavior. The process starts by assesing the research setting to identify the potential sources of bias and then implementing both procedural and statistical methods of control.


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