Business and Management INK

Speak the Language of the Universe

July 11, 2012 1546

Even if you’re not mathematically inclined, it is difficult to not feel inspired by Galileo’s famous statement that “mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe”—and according to an article in Organizational Research Methods (ORM), this piece of wisdom is more relevant to your work as an organizational scholar than you might realize.

Jeffrey B. Vancouver and Justin M. Weinhardt, both of Ohio University, published “Modeling the Mind and the Milieu: Computational Modeling for Micro-Level Organizational Researchers” on July 9, 2012 in ORM. To see more OnlineFirst aticles, click here. The authors argue that computational models—which are “algorithmic descriptions of process details…typically operationalized as computer programs”—are an advantageous tool not taken seriously enough in organizational research:

Unfortunately, we argue that this relative absence of computational modeling has undermined the quality of theory in the organizational sciences. In particular, organizational scholars often develop verbal dynamic theories, but there is little discussion of how the dynamic relationships play out over time. Moreover, there is a growing body of research showing that even well-educated individuals are poor at understanding the effects of dynamic processes without external aids (e.g., Cronin, Gonzalez, & Sterman, 2009; Hintzman, 1990). In contrast, computational models force scholars to operationalize the underlying assumptions of their theories (Lewandowsky & Farrell, 2011). This can highlight unrecognized problems or advance understanding.

Read the complete article here. To learn more about Organizational Research Methods, please follow this link.

Are you interested in receiving email alerts about newly published articles and issues? Then click here!

Business and Management INK puts the spotlight on research published in our more than 100 management and business journals. We feature an inside view of the research that’s being published in top-tier SAGE journals by the authors themselves.

View all posts by Business & Management INK

Related Articles

Qualitative Researchers Point Out The Limitations of AI’s Contributions
Artificial Intelligence
May 26, 2026

Qualitative Researchers Point Out The Limitations of AI’s Contributions

Read Now
Who Do You Trust More: Your Colleagues or Your AI?
Artificial Intelligence
May 22, 2026

Who Do You Trust More: Your Colleagues or Your AI?

Read Now
Academic Authorship Confronts Ghosts, Gifts and Gender
Higher Education Reform
May 14, 2026

Academic Authorship Confronts Ghosts, Gifts and Gender

Read Now
From ‘Which Database?’ to ‘Under What Conditions?’: Teaching Critical Thinking Through Search Tool Selection in an AI Age
Critical Thinking
April 28, 2026

From ‘Which Database?’ to ‘Under What Conditions?’: Teaching Critical Thinking Through Search Tool Selection in an AI Age

Read Now
Celebrating the National Survey of Health and Development: 1946-2026

Celebrating the National Survey of Health and Development: 1946-2026

Eighty years ago this month, the United Kingdom pioneered a novel form of social science research, the life-long cohort study. The tool […]

Read Now
Can Accounting Impact Employee Wellbeing?

Can Accounting Impact Employee Wellbeing?

Although many may think of accounting as something abstract that happens only in spreadsheets, a new study shows that accounting can impact […]

Read Now
A Psychologist Explains Replication (and Why It’s Not the Same as Reproducibility)

A Psychologist Explains Replication (and Why It’s Not the Same as Reproducibility)

Back in high school chemistry, I remember waiting with my bench partner for crystals to form on our stick in the cup […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments