p-Values and Null Hypothesis Significance Testing (NHST), combined with a large number of institutional factors, jointly define the Generally Accepted Soft Social Science Publishing Process (GASSSPP) that is now dominant in the social sciences and is increasingly used elsewhere. The case against NHST and the GASSSPP has been abundantly articulated over past decades, and yet it continues to spread, supported by a large number of self-reinforcing institutional processes. In this article, the author presents a number of steps that may be taken to counter the spread of this corruption that directly address the institutional forces, both as individuals and through collaborative efforts. While individual efforts are indispensable to this undertaking, the author argues that these alone cannot succeed unless the institutional forces are also addressed. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.
There has long been awareness of the lack of translation of academic research into professional practice. One recent suggested explanation of this is that academic research is "lost in translation;" another proposition is that a "food chain" of academic research provides communication linkages, wherein empirical research becomes absorbed into popular books and consulting materials, eventually reaching management practitioners and perhaps creating a pathway for translation and application. To partially examine these models, the author sampled 30 best-selling business books published between 1996 and 2005 and analyzed the 3,162 references cited in them. There is virtually no evidence to suggest a research "food chain" through these books. Neither does the pattern of citations suggest a "translation problem;" if anything, it suggests gratuitous citation of selected articles that frequently follow little or no discernible logic. The author suggests that the underlying problem may be one of research methods and interpretation that are common to the published literature in our discipline.
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