Abstract


 
 
 While considerable progress has been made in organizational neuroscience over the past decade, we argue that critical evaluations of published empirical works are not being conducted carefully and consistently. In this ex- tended commentary we take as an example Waldman and colleagues (2017): a major review work that evaluates the state-of-the-art of organizational neuroscience. In what should be an evaluation of the field’s empirical work, the authors uncritically summarize a series of studies that: (1) provide insufficient transparency to be clearly un- derstood, evaluated, or replicated, and/or (2) which misuse inferential tests that lead to misleading conclusions, among other concerns. These concerns have been ignored across multiple major reviews and citing articles. We therefore provide a post-publication review (in two parts) of one-third of all studies evaluated in Waldman and colleague’s major review work. In Part I, we systematically evaluate the field’s two seminal works with respect to their methods, analytic strategy, results, and interpretation of findings. And in Part II, we provide focused reviews of secondary works that each center on a specific concern we suggest should be a point of discussion as the field moves forward. In doing so, we identify a series of practices we recommend will improve the state of the literature. This includes: (1) evaluating the transparency and completeness of an empirical article before accepting its claims, (2) becoming familiar with common misuses or misconceptions of statistical testing, and (3) interpreting results with an explicit reference to effect size magnitude, precision, and accuracy, among other recommendations. We suggest that adopting these practices will motivate the development of a more replicable, reliable, and trustworthy field of organizational neuroscience moving forward.
 
 

Highlights

  • Organizational neuroscience is a domain of research that draws heavily on social and cognitive neuroscience traditions, but which examines how neuroscience can inform our understanding of people and organizing processes in the context of work (Waldman, Ward, & Becker, 2017)

  • We argue that scholars of organizational neuroscience are not considering these implications often enough, especially in major reviews of the literature

  • Report descriptive statistics that are relevant to interpreting data

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Summary

Introduction

Organizational neuroscience is a domain of research that draws heavily on social and cognitive neuroscience traditions, but which examines how neuroscience can inform our understanding of people and organizing processes in the context of work (Waldman, Ward, & Becker, 2017). The standards within psychological science (including organizational behavior research) are changing to reflect concerns over the transparency of reporting practices, appropriate use of inferential statistics, and the replicability of published findings (Cumming, 2008, 2014; Cumming & Maillardet, 2006; Nichols et al, 2016; Nichols et al, 2017; Simmons, Nelson, & Simonsohn, 2011; Wicherts et al, 2016). In this extended commentary, we argue that scholars of organizational neuroscience are not considering these implications often enough, especially in major reviews of the literature

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