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Recruiting Method and Its Impact on Participant Behavior
by
Cook, Gail Lynn
, Yeboah, David
, Bay, Darlene
in
Accounting
/ Accounting/Accountancy
/ Behavioural Accounting
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Recruiting Method and Its Impact on Participant Behavior
by
Cook, Gail Lynn
, Yeboah, David
, Bay, Darlene
in
Accounting
/ Accounting/Accountancy
/ Behavioural Accounting
2020
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Book Chapter
Recruiting Method and Its Impact on Participant Behavior
2020
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Overview
Abstract
Purpose – Recruiting sufficient participants who adequately represent the population of interest is an ongoing issue for accounting experimental researchers. This study investigates the impact of recruitment method on the number of participants, effort on the experimental task, and sample bias with respect to three individual difference variables (locus of control, social desirability response bias, and prosocial behavior). We employ five different recruitment methods: three forms of monetary compensation and two levels of an appeal for help with a research project.
Methodology – We recruit students in five sections of the same course taught by the same instructor (not one of the researchers), manipulating recruitment method across sections. Immediately following recruitment, participants completed a simple experimental task and scales for the individual difference variables.
Findings – We find that the method of recruiting resulted in different response rates, with appeal from a fellow student yielding the highest response rate, and appeal from a professor yielding the lowest response rate. Effort was greatest for the appeal from the professor and least for the draw. While the five subsamples that resulted from the five recruiting methods were not different with respect to the individual difference variables, the relationship of those variables to effort did vary.
Research Implications – Our findings suggest that researchers must carefully consider recruitment method not only in terms of how many participants can be attracted, but also in terms of the potential impact of the manner in which recruitment was conducted on the attitudes and behaviors of the participants during the experiment.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited
Subject
ISBN
9781838674021, 1838674020
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