This book provides an up-to-date review of commonly undertaken methodological and statistical practices that are sustained, in part, upon sound rationale and justification and, in part, upon unfounded lore. Some examples of these "methodological urban legends," as we refer to them in this book, are characterized by manuscript critiques such as: (a) "your self-report measures suffer from common method bias"; (b) "your item-to-subject ratios are too low"; (c) "you can t generalize these findings to the real world"; or (d) "your effect sizes are too low."
Historically, there is a...
This book provides an up-to-date review of commonly undertaken methodological and statistical practices that are sustained, in part, upon sound rat...