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:

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

Showing 1-25 of 668 citing articles:

An Analysis of Data Quality: Professional Panels, Student Subject Pools, and Amazon's Mechanical Turk
Jeremy Kees, Christopher Berry, Scot Burton, et al.
Journal of Advertising (2017) Vol. 46, Iss. 1, pp. 141-155
Closed Access | Times Cited: 816

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

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

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

Americans, Not Partisans: Can Priming American National Identity Reduce Affective Polarization?
Matthew Levendusky
The Journal of Politics (2017) Vol. 80, Iss. 1, pp. 59-70
Closed Access | Times Cited: 403

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

The Elite Is Up to Something: Exploring the Relation Between Populism and Belief in Conspiracy Theories
Bruno Castanho Silva, Federico Vegetti, Levente Littvay
Swiss Political Science Review (2017) Vol. 23, Iss. 4, pp. 423-443
Open Access | Times Cited: 361

Priming and Fake News: The Effects of Elite Discourse on Evaluations of News Media
Emily Van Duyn, Jessica R. Collier
Mass Communication & Society (2018) Vol. 22, Iss. 1, pp. 29-48
Closed Access | Times Cited: 340

The Paranoid Style in American Politics Revisited: An Ideological Asymmetry in Conspiratorial Thinking
Sander van der Linden, Costas Panagopoulos, Flávio Azevedo, et al.
Political Psychology (2020) Vol. 42, Iss. 1, pp. 23-51
Open Access | Times Cited: 252

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

The Role of Engagement in Learning From Active and Incidental News Exposure on Social Media
Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch
Mass Communication & Society (2017) Vol. 21, Iss. 2, pp. 225-247
Closed Access | Times Cited: 176

Neoliberal Ideology and the Justification of Inequality in Capitalist Societies: Why Social and Economic Dimensions of Ideology Are Intertwined
Flávio Azevedo, John T. Jost, Tobias Rothmund, et al.
Journal of Social Issues (2019) Vol. 75, Iss. 1, pp. 49-88
Closed Access | Times Cited: 176

Privacy concerns can explain unwillingness to download and use contact tracing apps when COVID-19 concerns are high
Eugene Y. Chan, Najam U. Saqib
Computers in Human Behavior (2021) Vol. 119, pp. 106718-106718
Open Access | Times Cited: 171

Ideology Justifies Morality: Political Beliefs Predict Moral Foundations
Peter Hatemi, Charles Crabtree, Kevin B. Smith
American Journal of Political Science (2019) Vol. 63, Iss. 4, pp. 788-806
Closed Access | Times Cited: 164

Accuracy prompts are a replicable and generalizable approach for reducing the spread of misinformation
Gordon Pennycook, David G. Rand
Nature Communications (2022) Vol. 13, Iss. 1
Open Access | Times Cited: 146

Coping during the COVID-19 pandemic: Relations with mental health and quality of life.
Amanda L. Shamblaw, Rachel Rumas, Michael W. Best
Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne (2021) Vol. 62, Iss. 1, pp. 92-100
Closed Access | Times Cited: 134

Online food delivery services and consumers' purchase intention: Integration of theory of planned behavior, theory of perceived risk, and the elaboration likelihood model
Souji Gopalakrishna Pillai, Woo Gon Kim, Kavitha Haldorai, et al.
International Journal of Hospitality Management (2022) Vol. 105, pp. 103275-103275
Closed Access | Times Cited: 104

Representativeness versus Response Quality: Assessing Nine Opt-In Online Survey Samples
Michael N. Stagnaro, James Druckman, Adam J. Berinsky, et al.
(2024)
Open Access | Times Cited: 22

Evaluating SoJump.com as a tool for online behavioral research in China
Alessandro Del Ponte, Lianjun Li, Lina Ang, et al.
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance (2024) Vol. 41, pp. 100905-100905
Closed Access | Times Cited: 19

The Opportunities and Limitations of Using Mechanical Turk (MTURK) in Public Administration and Management Scholarship
Justin M. Stritch, Mogens Jin Pedersen, Gabel Taggart
International Public Management Journal (2017) Vol. 20, Iss. 3, pp. 489-511
Open Access | Times Cited: 164

Metaphors for the War (or Race) against Climate Change
Stephen J. Flusberg, Teenie Matlock, Paul H. Thibodeau
Environmental Communication (2017) Vol. 11, Iss. 6, pp. 769-783
Closed Access | Times Cited: 161

Finding the Loch Ness Monster: Left-Wing Authoritarianism in the United States
Lucian Gideon Conway, Shannon C. Houck, Laura Janelle Gornick, et al.
Political Psychology (2017) Vol. 39, Iss. 5, pp. 1049-1067
Closed Access | Times Cited: 159

Predicting real-world outcomes: Critical thinking ability is a better predictor of life decisions than intelligence
Heather A. Butler, Christopher Pentoney, Mabelle P. Bong
Thinking Skills and Creativity (2017) Vol. 25, pp. 38-46
Closed Access | Times Cited: 144

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