On making experimental design choices: Discussions on the use and challenges of demand effects, incentives, deception, samples, and vignettes

In late 2018, the Journal of Operations Management published an invited methods article by Lonati et al. (2018) to provide guidance to authors on how to design behavioral experiments to achieve the rigor required for consideration in the journal. That article was written as a response to a number of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of operations management 2021-03, Vol.67 (2), p.261-275
Hauptverfasser: Eckerd, Stephanie, DuHadway, Scott, Bendoly, Elliot, Carter, Craig R., Kaufmann, Lutz
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container_end_page 275
container_issue 2
container_start_page 261
container_title Journal of operations management
container_volume 67
creator Eckerd, Stephanie
DuHadway, Scott
Bendoly, Elliot
Carter, Craig R.
Kaufmann, Lutz
description In late 2018, the Journal of Operations Management published an invited methods article by Lonati et al. (2018) to provide guidance to authors on how to design behavioral experiments to achieve the rigor required for consideration in the journal. That article was written as a response to a number of behavioral research submissions to JOM, each dealing with interesting topics but viewed by the editors to possess poor design choices at inception. While the Lonati et al. (2018) piece provides experimental guidance fitting to certain research agendas, questions have arisen concerning whether and how exactly to implement some of the points that it makes, and how to best address trade‐offs in the design of behavioral experiments. Questions have also arisen concerning how to apply these concepts in operations management research. This technical note seeks to address these questions, by diving into the details of research risks and trade‐offs regarding demand effects, incentives, deception, sample selection, and context‐rich vignettes. The authors would like to recognize the input of a large number of senior scholars in the JOM community who have provided support and feedback as we have sought to help authors tease out what can reasonably be done in designing strong behavioral experiments that fit various research agendas.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/joom.1128
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source Wiley Online Library - AutoHoldings Journals
subjects deception
demand effects
Design of experiments
Experimental methods
Experiments
Incentives
Operations management
Questions
sample
vignettes
title On making experimental design choices: Discussions on the use and challenges of demand effects, incentives, deception, samples, and vignettes
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