TY - JOUR
T1 - Constructs and indicators
T2 - An ontological analysis
AU - Weber, Ron
N1 - Funding Information:
I am indebted to participants in workshops at the University of Queensland, Queensland University of Technology, University of New South Wales, and National Chung Cheng University for helpful feedback on earlier versions of this paper. I am especially indebted to Andrew Burton-Jones, Guy Gable, Shirley Gregor, Kai Larsen, Roman Lukyanenko, Andrew Macfarlane, Suprateek Sarker, and Mary Tate for helpful discussions and feedback during the development of the paper. My thanks, also, to Jason Thatcher (senior editor), Ryan Wright (associate editor), and four reviewers for their very helpful comments on the paper. Of course, I bear sole responsibility for any errors in the paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 University of Minnesota. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Constructs and indicators are central to the efforts of many researchers who seek to build and test theories and articulate rich narratives about real-world phenomena. For this reason, an extensive discourse exists about their nature. Increasingly, this discourse has become fraught with controversy. Using Bunge’s (1977, 1979) ontology, I examine the nature of constructs and indicators as they are discussed in the extant literature. I define these concepts precisely, disentangle conceptual from measurement issues, and point to ways that discourse about them could better proceed. I show that unidimensional constructs, multidimensional constructs, dimensions, and indicators are all properties in general of a class of things. I also show that only three types of indicators exist—synonyms of the focal construct and succeeding or preceding properties in a pre-order of properties that includes the focal construct. I examine ontologically the notions of content validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, and internal-consistency reliability and show their problematic nature. I introduce two new concepts, scope validity and the level of concomitance of indicators, that have rigorous ontological foundations. Together, they provide an improved foundation for assessing the construct validity of a set of indicators.
AB - Constructs and indicators are central to the efforts of many researchers who seek to build and test theories and articulate rich narratives about real-world phenomena. For this reason, an extensive discourse exists about their nature. Increasingly, this discourse has become fraught with controversy. Using Bunge’s (1977, 1979) ontology, I examine the nature of constructs and indicators as they are discussed in the extant literature. I define these concepts precisely, disentangle conceptual from measurement issues, and point to ways that discourse about them could better proceed. I show that unidimensional constructs, multidimensional constructs, dimensions, and indicators are all properties in general of a class of things. I also show that only three types of indicators exist—synonyms of the focal construct and succeeding or preceding properties in a pre-order of properties that includes the focal construct. I examine ontologically the notions of content validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, and internal-consistency reliability and show their problematic nature. I introduce two new concepts, scope validity and the level of concomitance of indicators, that have rigorous ontological foundations. Together, they provide an improved foundation for assessing the construct validity of a set of indicators.
KW - construct validity
KW - content validity
KW - convergent validity
KW - discriminant validity
KW - formative indicators
KW - level of concomitance
KW - multidimensional constructs
KW - Ontology
KW - reflective indicators
KW - reliability
KW - scope validity
KW - unidimensional constructs
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85180770071&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.25300/MISQ/2021/15999
DO - 10.25300/MISQ/2021/15999
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85180770071
SN - 0276-7783
VL - 45
SP - 1644
EP - 1678
JO - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
JF - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
IS - 4
ER -