Modeling complex entrepreneurial processes A bibliometric method for designing agent-based simulation models
Authored by Jaehu Shim, Martin Bliemel, Myeonggil Choi
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1108/ijebr-11-2016-0374
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to suggest a bibliometric method
for designing agent-based models (ABMs) in entrepreneurship research.
The application of this method is illustrated with an exemplary
agent-based modeling and simulation (ABMS) regarding the early venture
growth process. This bibliometric approach invigorates the utilization
of ABMS as a viable researchmethodology in process-oriented
entrepreneurship research.
Design/methodology/approach - In the bibliometric method, a domain
corpus composed of scholarly articles is established and systematically
analyzed through co-word analysis to discern essential concepts (i.e.
agents, objects, and contexts) and their interrelations. The usefulness
of the bibliometric method is elucidated by constructing an illustrative
ABMS.
Findings - The bibliometric method for designing ABMs identifies
essential concepts in the entrepreneurship literature and provides
contexts in which the concepts are interrelated. The illustrative ABMS
based on these concepts and interrelations accurately and consistently
reproduces the emergence of power-law distributions in venture outcomes
consistent with empirical evidence, implying further merit to
bibliometric procedures.
Practical implications - The proposed method can be used not only to
build simple models with essential concepts, but also to build more
complex models that take a large number of concepts and their
interrelations into consideration.
Originality/value - This study proposes a bibliometric method for
designing ABMs. The proposed method extends similar procedures that are
limited to thematic or cluster analysis by examining the semantic
contexts in which the concepts co-occur. This research suggests that
ABMS from bibliographic sources can be built and validated with
empirical evidence. Several considerations are provided for the combined
utilization of the bibliometric method and ABMS in entrepreneurship.
Tags
Complexity
networks
Power-law distribution
Management research
Protocol
Impact
Opportunities
Organization science
Entrepreneurial process
Agent-based modelling and
simulation
Bibliometric method
Venture-creation