Publication
Reproducibility in Management Science
Crowd Science
Replication
Reproductibility
2024
2024, Management Science, 70(3), pp.1343-2022, iii-iv
Abstract
With the help of more than 700 reviewers we assess the reproducibility of nearly 500 articles published in the journal Management Science before and after the introduction of a new Data and Code Disclosure policy in 2019. When considering only articles for which data accessibility andhard- and software requirements were not an obstacle for reviewers, the results of more than 95% of articles under the new disclosure policy could be fully or largely computationally reproduced. However, for 29% of articles at least part of the dataset was not accessible to the reviewer.Considering all articles in our sample reduces the share of reproduced articles to 68%. These figures represent a significant increase compared to the period before the introduction of the disclosure policy, where only 12% of articles voluntarily provided replication materials, out of which 55% couldbe (largely) reproduced. Substantial heterogeneity in reproducibility rates across different fields ismainly driven by differences in dataset accessibility. Other reasons for unsuccessful reproduction attempts include missing code, unresolvable code errors, weak or missing documentation, but alsosoft- and hardware requirements and code complexity. Our findings highlight the importanceof journal code and data disclosure policies, and suggest potential avenues for enhancing their effectiveness.