It has become widely accepted that correlations between variables measured with the same method, usually self-report surveys, are inflated due to the action of common method variance (CMV), despite a number of sources that suggest the problem is overstated. The author argues that the popular position suggesting CMV automatically affects variables measured with the same method is a distortion and oversimplification of the true state of affairs, reaching the status of urban legend. Empirical evidence is discussed casting doubt that the method itself produces systematic variance in observations that inflates correlations to any significant degree. It is suggested that the term common method variance be abandoned in favor of a focus on measurem...
Beliefs and practices regarding common method variance (CMV) were surveyed from a sample of top jour...
Although common method variance has been a subject of research concern for over fifty years, its inf...
This paper presents a meta-analysis-based technique to estimate the effect of common method variance...
It has become widely accepted that correlations between variables measured with the same method, usu...
It has become widely accepted that correlations between variables measured with the same method, usu...
The potential inflation of correlations between measures assessed via the same method (e.g., self-re...
It is widely accepted that the method of measurement can affect observations made in scientific stud...
Method variance is an artifact of measurement that biases results when relations are explored among ...
New key evidence on common method variance (CMV) has been generated in the last decade (including qu...
Many researchers who use same-source data face concerns about common method variance (CMV). Although...
There are enduring misconceptions in the marketing and management literature about the potential bia...
Despite concern about method variance between measures as a bias in survey research, scholars have o...
Common method variance (CMV) is an important concern in international marketing research because pre...
This article tackles a pervasive problem in behavioral research, the cause and consequences of commo...
One of the most discussed and controversial methodological and statistical issues that concerns empi...
Beliefs and practices regarding common method variance (CMV) were surveyed from a sample of top jour...
Although common method variance has been a subject of research concern for over fifty years, its inf...
This paper presents a meta-analysis-based technique to estimate the effect of common method variance...
It has become widely accepted that correlations between variables measured with the same method, usu...
It has become widely accepted that correlations between variables measured with the same method, usu...
The potential inflation of correlations between measures assessed via the same method (e.g., self-re...
It is widely accepted that the method of measurement can affect observations made in scientific stud...
Method variance is an artifact of measurement that biases results when relations are explored among ...
New key evidence on common method variance (CMV) has been generated in the last decade (including qu...
Many researchers who use same-source data face concerns about common method variance (CMV). Although...
There are enduring misconceptions in the marketing and management literature about the potential bia...
Despite concern about method variance between measures as a bias in survey research, scholars have o...
Common method variance (CMV) is an important concern in international marketing research because pre...
This article tackles a pervasive problem in behavioral research, the cause and consequences of commo...
One of the most discussed and controversial methodological and statistical issues that concerns empi...
Beliefs and practices regarding common method variance (CMV) were surveyed from a sample of top jour...
Although common method variance has been a subject of research concern for over fifty years, its inf...
This paper presents a meta-analysis-based technique to estimate the effect of common method variance...