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When Shooting for the Stars Becomes Aiming for Asterisks: P-Hacking in Family Business Research

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  • Jasper Brinkerink

Abstract

As a side-effect of increasing publication pressures, academics may be tempted to engage in p -hacking: a questionable research practice involving the iterative and incompletely-disclosed adjustment of data collection, analysis, and/or reporting, until nonsignificant results turn significant. Prior studies in entrepreneurship-related disciplines carry the implicit notion that p -hacking is predominantly an issue in top-tier journals, where incentives to do so may be highest. This study investigates p -hacking in the family business literature, a research field with roots in the broader entrepreneurship and small business literatures, and in which discourse increasingly takes place in both dedicated field journals and in the top-tier outlets in entrepreneurship and management. Analyses of p -values published in these field- and top-tier journals allow for a comparison of the prevalence and correlates of p -hacking at these different levels of prestige. The findings suggest that p -hacking is an issue of substantial—and statistically indistinguishable—magnitudes in both field- and top-tier journals. We further observe negative correlations of female authorship and employer prestige with p -hacking, where the latter is stronger in field versus top-tier journals. Implications of these findings, their limitations, and some suggestions going forward are discussed, with particular attention for the promise of preregistration and registered reports.

Suggested Citation

  • Jasper Brinkerink, 2023. "When Shooting for the Stars Becomes Aiming for Asterisks: P-Hacking in Family Business Research," Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, , vol. 47(2), pages 304-343, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:entthe:v:47:y:2023:i:2:p:304-343
    DOI: 10.1177/10422587211050354
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