OpenAlex Citation Counts

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OpenAlex is a bibliographic catalogue of scientific papers, authors and institutions accessible in open access mode, named after the Library of Alexandria. It's citation coverage is excellent and I hope you will find utility in this listing of citing articles!

If you click the article title, you'll navigate to the article, as listed in CrossRef. If you click the Open Access links, you'll navigate to the "best Open Access location". Clicking the citation count will open this listing for that article. Lastly at the bottom of the page, you'll find basic pagination options.

Requested Article:

Cross-Sample Comparisons and External Validity
Yanna Krupnikov, Adam Seth Levine
Journal of Experimental Political Science (2014) Vol. 1, Iss. 1, pp. 59-80
Closed Access | Times Cited: 235

Showing 1-25 of 235 citing articles:

Lazy, not biased: Susceptibility to partisan fake news is better explained by lack of reasoning than by motivated reasoning
Gordon Pennycook, David G. Rand
Cognition (2018) Vol. 188, pp. 39-50
Closed Access | Times Cited: 1553

The Generalizability of Survey Experiments
Kevin Mullinix, Thomas J. Leeper, James Druckman, et al.
Journal of Experimental Political Science (2015) Vol. 2, Iss. 2, pp. 109-138
Open Access | Times Cited: 1095

Prior exposure increases perceived accuracy of fake news.
Gordon Pennycook, Tyrone D. Cannon, David G. Rand
Journal of Experimental Psychology General (2018) Vol. 147, Iss. 12, pp. 1865-1880
Open Access | Times Cited: 970

Many Labs 2: Investigating Variation in Replicability Across Samples and Settings
Richard Klein, Michelangelo Vianello, Fred Hasselman, et al.
Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science (2018) Vol. 1, Iss. 4, pp. 443-490
Open Access | Times Cited: 921

Are samples drawn from Mechanical Turk valid for research on political ideology?
Scott Clifford, Ryan Jewell, Philip Waggoner
Research & Politics (2015) Vol. 2, Iss. 4
Open Access | Times Cited: 668

The Demographic and Political Composition of Mechanical Turk Samples
Kevin E. Levay, Jeremy Freese, James Druckman
SAGE Open (2016) Vol. 6, Iss. 1
Open Access | Times Cited: 633

Validity and Mechanical Turk: An assessment of exclusion methods and interactive experiments
Kyle A. Thomas, Scott Clifford
Computers in Human Behavior (2017) Vol. 77, pp. 184-197
Closed Access | Times Cited: 573

Real Solutions for Fake News? Measuring the Effectiveness of General Warnings and Fact-Check Tags in Reducing Belief in False Stories on Social Media
Katherine Clayton, Spencer Blair, Jonathan A. Busam, et al.
Political Behavior (2019) Vol. 42, Iss. 4, pp. 1073-1095
Closed Access | Times Cited: 536

The Implied Truth Effect: Attaching Warnings to a Subset of Fake News Headlines Increases Perceived Accuracy of Headlines Without Warnings
Gordon Pennycook, Adam Bear, Evan Collins, et al.
Management Science (2020) Vol. 66, Iss. 11, pp. 4944-4957
Open Access | Times Cited: 525

Online panels in social science research: Expanding sampling methods beyond Mechanical Turk
Jesse Chandler, Cheskie Rosenzweig, Aaron J. Moss, et al.
Behavior Research Methods (2019) Vol. 51, Iss. 5, pp. 2022-2038
Open Access | Times Cited: 523

Recruiting large online samples in the United States and India: Facebook, Mechanical Turk, and Qualtrics
Taylor C. Boas, Dino Christenson, David Glick
Political Science Research and Methods (2018) Vol. 8, Iss. 2, pp. 232-250
Open Access | Times Cited: 483

Generalizing from Survey Experiments Conducted on Mechanical Turk: A Replication Approach
Alexander Coppock
Political Science Research and Methods (2018) Vol. 7, Iss. 3, pp. 613-628
Open Access | Times Cited: 449

The shape of and solutions to the MTurk quality crisis
Ryan Kennedy, Scott Clifford, Tyler Burleigh, et al.
Political Science Research and Methods (2020) Vol. 8, Iss. 4, pp. 614-629
Open Access | Times Cited: 417

Demand Effects in Survey Experiments: An Empirical Assessment
Jonathan Mummolo, Erik Peterson
American Political Science Review (2018) Vol. 113, Iss. 2, pp. 517-529
Closed Access | Times Cited: 406

Generalizability of heterogeneous treatment effect estimates across samples
Alexander Coppock, Thomas J. Leeper, Kevin Mullinix
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2018) Vol. 115, Iss. 49, pp. 12441-12446
Open Access | Times Cited: 363

Taking Fact-Checks Literally But Not Seriously? The Effects of Journalistic Fact-Checking on Factual Beliefs and Candidate Favorability
Brendan Nyhan, Ethan Porter, Jason Reifler, et al.
Political Behavior (2019) Vol. 42, Iss. 3, pp. 939-960
Closed Access | Times Cited: 361

Conducting interactive experiments online
Antonio A. Arechar, Simon Gächter, Lucas Molleman
Experimental Economics (2017) Vol. 21, Iss. 1, pp. 99-131
Open Access | Times Cited: 307

Reliance on emotion promotes belief in fake news
Cameron Martel, Gordon Pennycook, David G. Rand
Cognitive Research Principles and Implications (2020) Vol. 5, Iss. 1
Open Access | Times Cited: 306

The Politically Motivated Reasoning Paradigm, Part 1: What Politically Motivated Reasoning Is and How to Measure It
Dan M. Kahan
Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences (2016), pp. 1-16
Closed Access | Times Cited: 290

Are Mechanical Turk worker samples representative of health status and health behaviors in the U.S.?
Kelly Walters, Dimitri Christakis, Davene R. Wright
PLoS ONE (2018) Vol. 13, Iss. 6, pp. e0198835-e0198835
Open Access | Times Cited: 226

Crowdsourcing Samples in Cognitive Science
Neil Stewart, Jesse Chandler, Gabriele Paolacci
Trends in Cognitive Sciences (2017) Vol. 21, Iss. 10, pp. 736-748
Open Access | Times Cited: 224

No Harm in Checking: Using Factual Manipulation Checks to Assess Attentiveness in Experiments
John Kane, Jason Barabas
American Journal of Political Science (2018) Vol. 63, Iss. 1, pp. 234-249
Open Access | Times Cited: 212

Elite rhetoric can undermine democratic norms
Katherine Clayton, Nicholas T. Davis, Brendan Nyhan, et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021) Vol. 118, Iss. 23
Open Access | Times Cited: 160

Increasing Precision without Altering Treatment Effects: Repeated Measures Designs in Survey Experiments
Scott Clifford, Geoffrey Sheagley, Spencer Piston
American Political Science Review (2021) Vol. 115, Iss. 3, pp. 1048-1065
Open Access | Times Cited: 144

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