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Summary Quantitative Research Methods for pre-master students

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A summary of all relevant lectures and workshops for the final QRM exam!

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  • October 24, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Quantitative research methods

Lecture 1 – Designing research

Quantitative research

Quantitative research > quantitative research methods revolve around answering a particular research
question by collecting numerical data that are analysed using mathematical methods > in particular, statistics
- Experimental data > research that uses structured observations from the real world to attempt to
answer question > by observations
o Often collected in laboratory environments in the natural sciences
o Much more difficult in the social sciences > here we mainly focus on analysing non-
experimental (observational) data
 Meaning > not accumulated through controlled experiments
 Measurements are hard to take precisely
- Types
o Descriptive research > what?
 Interested in a quantitative answer > which program has the most students?
 Interested in a numerical change > are the numbers of premaster students in our
university rising compared to last year?
o Inferential research > why?
 Test relationships > what is the relation between self-esteem and average grade?
 Explain something > what factors cause changes in student performance over time?
- Be careful because numbers and statistics are seldom objective and disinterested
o Data have always been manipulated and sometimes with the wrong intentions
- Why do we need quantitative research?
o In essence, quantitative research methods provide us with a toolbox to study the (social)
world around us using the scientific method
o Helps in minimizing cognitive assumptions that may distort our interpretation
o Depending on the state of prior theory and research on the topic, you must use quantitative
methods to make a useful contribution to our understanding of the world
o Only way to establish causal relationships




- Simpson’s paradox refers to a phenomenon whereby
the association between a pair of variables (X, Y)
reverses sign upon conditioning of a third variable, Z,
regardless of the value taken by Z
o Example > a higher dosage of medicine may be
associated with higher recovery rates at the
population-level > however, within subgroups
(e.g., for both males and females) a higher
dosage my results in lower recovery rates

,Research design

Research Design > tells you how you will answer a question > good research design can answer this question

Theory > identifies what variables are important and for what reasons > how they are interrelated and why
and identifies conditions under which they should be related and not related
- Variable > when we end up with when we apply our measure to something in the world
o That is, variables are the actual data that we end up with in our data sets
- In any relationship > you will have independent variable/predictor and a dependent variable/outcome
o Education and wage > there will be a positive or negative correlation > here, a control
variable could be age or gender
- Hypothesis > defines the expected relationship between variables and therewith tests the existence
of a theory > variable X has a positive relationship with variable Y

Research questions

Research question in quantitative empirical research > a question that can be answered
- What the best movie is > cannot be answered because “best” is ambiguous > which movie is sold the
most > correct), and for which having that answer will improve understanding of how the world works
- Good research question
o Takes us from theory to hypothesis
o A hypothesis is a specific statement about what we will observe in the world

Data mining > just look at patterns in data without using a question
- However, that is helpful to find patterns and make predictions under stability (stability > the process
giving us the data does not change)
- Why does data mining have difficulty helping theory?
o Focuses on what is in the data > not why > fantastic at revealing correlations, but the
correlations it uncovers may have little to do with causality or an understanding of why those
variables move together
- Trying to understand ice cream sales, you notice that the proportion of people wearing shorts is a
good predictor of ice cream sales > but shorts-wearing is not why people buy ice cream > because it is
hot > for a data miner, the shorts and ice cream connection is compelling
- Less good at improving theory > why?
o Data mining is good at finding relationships but not at telling why relationships are there >
focuses on what is in the data and not why
o Data mining also does not deal in abstraction
o High chances of false positives
 Without a research question there is no reason not to just check everything >
something is going to pop up as related by random chance if you check enough stuff
- Data mining is not all bad > plenty of theories come from looking at the data in the first place, noticing
a pattern, and wonder why the pattern is showing up
o The responsible thing to do at that point is to not just take the pattern as given > instead,
take the pattern and look to see if it pops up in other data (if it is replicated)

Research question > tells us a hypothesis to test, such that the result of that test tells us something about the
theory > how do you know if your research question is a good one?
- Consider potential results
o Imagine what kind of sense you would make of that result > can you link results t theory?
- Consider feasibility
o Should be a question that can be answered using right data > check if right data is available
- Consider scale
o What kind of resource and time can you dedicate to answering the research question?
- Consider design
o Figure out if there is a reasonable research design you can use to answer it
- Keep it simple

, o Do not bundle a bunch of research questions into one
Lecture 2 – Research design

Theory building

What is a legitimate, value-added contribution to theory development? > new theory is not generated from
scratch > work on improving what already exists > three important points
- Proposed improvements should focus on multiple elements of a theory > adds the quality of
completeness and thoroughness to theoretical work
- Theoretical critiques should marshal compelling evidence > this evidence can be logical, empirical, or
epistemological
- Theoretical critiques should propose remedies or alternatives


Theory > an explanation of relationships among concepts or events within a set of boundary conditions
- A good theory simplifies and explains complex real—world phenomena
o Relationship between 2+ variables > hypothesis




- Elements of a good theory
o What
 Which factors (variables, concepts) logically should be considered as part of the
explanation of the social or individual phenomena of interest?
 Criteria for the right factors
 Comprehensiveness > are all relevant factors included?
 Parsimony > should some factors be deleted because they add little
additional value to our understanding?
o How
 How are the factors related? > the links between constructs and variables
 Involves using arrows to connect the boxes
 Introduces causality
 A visual representation often clarifies the author’s thinking
o Why
 The glue that justifies the selection of constructs/variables and their proposed
relationships
 Why explains, what and how describe
o Who, where, when?
 The conditions under which the theory should hold
 Set the boundaries of generalizability
 Moderators
 Typically, the relationship between one variable and another is different for
different people, in different contexts, or at different points in time
o E.g., The impact of education on your wage is stronger for young
people than for older people
 We say that the relationship between x and y depends on a third variable z,
the moderator
o E.g., age is the moderator in the example above

,  Moderators help us identify the boundary conditions of our theory
What factors are considered in judging conceptual papers?
- What is new?
o Significant, value-added contribution
- So what?
o Will the theory likely change the practice of organizational science in this area?
o Does the paper go beyond making statements?
- Why so?
o Are the underlying logic and supporting evidence compelling?
o Theory development should be built on a foundation of convincing argumentation and
grounded in reasonable, explicit views of human nature and organizational practice
o The “glue” that justifies the selection of variables and their proposed relationships
- Well done?
o Reflect second-thinking, conveying completeness and thoroughness
o Are multiple theoretical elements covered?
- Done well?
o Well written, logic flow
- Why now?
o Is the topic of contemporary interest to scholars in this area?
- Who cares?
o Make a significant contribution to current thinking

Example > phenomenon of interest > employee skills
- Research question > the impact of top management cognitive abilities on the skill level of employees
o Proposition > top management cognitive abilities increase the skill level of employees
o Hypothesis > The level of top management education increases the share of skilled in
employees in the company
o What
 Constructs: TM cognitive ability, employee skills
 Variables: TM education level (explanatory or independent variable), share of skilled
workers (outcome or dependent variable)
o How
 Proposition: Top management cognitive abilities increase the skill level of
employees
 Hypothesis: The level of top management education increases the share of skilled in
employees in the company
o Why
 Assortative matching (“birds of a feather flock
together”)
o Who, where, when?
 When the manager is inexperience


The Data Generating Process

The DGP > we assume there are similar “laws” that govern the social world around us
- We call these “laws” the data generating process (DGP)
- Your theoretical model is only a (small) part of the broader, more complex data generating process
- We need to make credible claims about the complete DGP so that we can identify the variation in the
data that answers our research question
- Scientists believe that there are regular laws that govern the way the universe works > these laws are
an example of a data generating process > the laws work behind the scenes > we cannot see the data,
but we do see the data that result from them
o The data generating process (DGP) is divided into two parts
 The parts we know and
 The parts we don’t know > what we are hoping to learn about with our research

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