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Percept-percept inflation in microorganizational research: An investigation of prevalence and effect.
1.2K
Citations
24
References
1994
Year
Social InfluenceSelf-report MethodsPercept-percept InflationSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesOrganizational BehaviorPsychologyBiasManagementSelf-report StudyFood SciencesOrganizational PsychologyDomain-specific InvestigationsHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceOrganizational ResearchFood SafetySelf-assessmentMicroorganizational Research
Analysis of 42,934 correlations published in 581 articles not only revealed general evidence that self-report methods have produced percept-percept inflation in microresearch on organizations but also suggested that this effect is diminished when 1 or both covariates are demographic variables. Further analysis of a subsample of 11,710 correlations indicated that percept-percept inflation has influenced research on particular bivariate relationships but has not had the broad, comprehensive effects envisioned by critics. These findings challenge the validity of general condemnations of self-report methods, suggesting instead that domain-specific investigations are required to determine which areas of research are especially susceptible to percept-percept effects
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