Title: Research Methods in Social Relations
1Research Methods in Social Relations
- Professor Mike Gallivan
- Georgia State University
- Atlanta, Georgia, USA
- Class 7 June 24, 2009
2Overview of Class 7 today
- Review of old material
- Multiple regression analysis in SPSS
- Sivo, Saunders, Chang Jiang (2006)
- This article appeared in Journal of the AIS
- New material for today
- Students will present their evaluation of
articles - More discussion of Sivo, Saunders, Chang Jiang
(2006) - Writing the Results section of papers
- Writing the Discussion section of papers
- Getting papers published in academic journals
3Here are the articles you can evaluate
- Bhattacharjee, S., Tung, Y.A. and Pathak, B.,
Author experiences with the IS journal review
process, Communications of the AIS, 13(37),
2004, p. 629-53. - Dalal, N., Singh, S. and Lanis, T. Research
concerns of IS faculty an exploratory
investigation, Journal of Computer IS, 39(3),
2004, pp. 18-25. - Koh, C.E., IS journal review process A survey
on IS research practices and journal review
issues, Infor- mation Management, 40(8), 2003,
pp. 743-56. - Gill, T.G., Whats an MIS paper worth? An
exploratory analysis, Database for Advances in
Information Systems, 32(2), 2001, pp. 14-33. - Tanner, J., Totaro, M. and Hotard, D. Research
productivity and teaching effectiveness MIS
faculty, Journal of Computer IS, 39(4), 1999,
pp. 8-15.
4You have a chance to read and evaluate published
articles
- For each assigned article, please answer
- How was the survey conducted?
- Mailed (paper-and-pencil), email, posted on
website - Who was the target population of survey?
- How many respondents answered survey?
- What analysis methods did authors use to
- Conduct convergent and discriminant validity?
- Test their hypotheses or theory?
- What was the response rate?
- What efforts to contact or remind
non-respondents? - Was the response rate better or worse than the
average article that Sivo, Saunders mentioned? - Do you think the authors used a good methodology?
- What should authors have done differently?
5Review Multiple Regression in SPSS
- This is for interval/ratio dependent variable
- you can only analyze 1 dep. variable at a time
- Always select options then pairwise deletion
- Indep. variables can be ordinal, interval, ratio
- you can analyze many indep. variables at once
- you can use a nominal variable if dichotomous
- do not use nominal variable with gt 2 categories
- unless you first create special dummy variables
- dummy variables can only have values 0 or
1 - House_1 dummy variable can be 0 or 1
- it can be 1 for all respondents in House 1
- it must be 0 for all other people (House 2, 3,
4, 5) - Use the Transform Compute function to create
6Review Multiple Regression in SPSS
- More details about multiple regression
- Entering predictor (independent variables)
- you can enter all predictors at the same time
- you can enter some predictors first, then others
- this is called blocks of predictor variables
- If you choose the blocks method, then
- select statistics and also R-squared change
- this will show how R2 increases for each block
7Multiple Regression Results in SPSS
8Problems with Response Rates
- Sivo, Saunders, Chang Jiang (2006)
- authors are all at University of Central Florida
- A good response rate is necessary for
- Internal validity to support your hypotheses
- External validity to be able to generalize
- Recommended response rates should be gt 50
- Most academic research articles, it is too low!
9Problems with Response Rates
- Sivo, Saunders, Chang Jiang (2006)
- Problems with survey studies
- measurement error
- Due to imperfect questionnaires (bad construct
validity) - sampling error
- Due to inadequate sample size or nonrandom
samples - coverage error
- Due to inability to contact some people in the
population - We will focus most on the last problem
- Also called non-response error
- some people are systematically not represented in
the sample, because they are more likely to not
be among the survey respondents - Very busy people are less likely to respond to a
survey - People without email address will not respond to
email survey
10More sources of Response Rates
- Other sources of non-response error
- People without email address will not respond to
email survey - People without telephones will not respond to a
phone survey - Research shows that men are less likely to answer
than women - Prior review of survey studies showed problems
- Paper published by Pinsonneault and Kraemer
(1993) - Identified the following problems in surveys
- Low response rates (I.e., lt 50)
- Unsystematic (not random) or inadequate sampling
- Single method designs
11Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- Writing the Results section of paper
- Setting the stage
- provide details about your n and response rate
- also explain efforts to contact non-respondents
- also compare respondents to non-respondents
- you can provide descriptive demographic
information - here is where you justify your survey method
- if this were a laboratory experiment study
- this is where you would show the treatment effect
- this is called a manipulation check in lab
studies - Describe your research analysis methods
- describe the methods in sequence you performed
them - explain your analysis methods before showing
actual results - please see examples in the two papers that I
published
12Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- Present the findings in detail
- It is often a good idea to repeat each hypothesis
before you present results - Use tables, graphs, pictures where it may helps
the reader to understand results - A picture is worth 1,000 words!
- Do you have the same expression in China?
- Textbook shows graph for sex-biased job ads vs.
sex-unbiased and sex-reversed job ads - Presentation of specific statistical results
- textbook provides detailed recommendations
13Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- Discussion section
- Your opportunity to explain what is means
- Also why the results are useful / important
- First, say what you have learned in study
- Second, you can explain how your results
- Are similar to (same as) findings in prior
research - Are different from findings in prior research
- Extra post hoc analyses
- For any very surprising (counter-intuitive)
results, you should try to provide explanation of
why - In our study, there was no relationship between
individual computer self-efficacy and IT usage
in fact, this relationship was very slightly
negative (I.e., -0.06). We believe that the
reason why our results differ from prior research
studies is because our subjects were ...
14Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- Discussion section
- State the implications for various people
- academic researchers
- business or government managers
- policy makers, politicians, university
administrators - teachers or students or citizens
- Maybe some special group (people searching for a
job) - State new questions for future research
- We suggest the following questions for future
study - Also state the Limitations (weaknesses) of
study - Survey (or experiment) was only with students
- Survey was conducted within just 1 city or
province - Low response rate (e.g., lt30), or small n
- It is not possible to prove causality from survey
data
15Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- Comments about writing style
- Each author develops their own writing style
- But its important to follow the standard of the
specific journal(s) where you want to publish - Some examples of writing style
- How long should a paragraph be? (e.g., 3-10
sentences) - Active voice (I analyzed the data using
regression) - Passive voice (The data were analyzed using )
- Some journals prefer active others prefer
passive - Some journals prefer you say we even if single
author - Combine very short sentences together using
conjunctions - Examples of conjunctions because, since, but,
however - Split very long sentences apart into separate
sentences
16Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)
- More comments about writing style
- Textbook suggests that you work from an outline
- Some word processing software has an outline
function - Use examples in your writing - especially if you
introduce a new construct that readers have never
heard of before - examples can help your readers to understand much
better - Use direct quotes from other researchers
- If you think another author said something in an
interesting way that will be compelling or
entertaining for readers - Do not simply use direct quotes just because you
are lazy - Never plagiarize another authors words or ideas
- This is a substantial difference between Asia and
USA - Students in Asia are taught to emulate (copy) the
experts - Students in US are never permitted to copy
another author unless they put into quotation
marks and cite the source
17Summary of Contents from Chapter 19 pp
463-476(Ch. 20 in green book, pp. 521-536)