{"meta":{"query_hash":"f0b6fc184576","filters":{"venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy"},"cohort_total":12,"direct_labels_cover":0,"predictions_cover":12,"exported":12,"export_cap":100000,"truncated":false,"label_status":"direct model label, unvalidated","prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated (Codex and Gemma teacher distillation)","score_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","snapshot":{"source":"OpenAlex, pinned release, all 482 partitions","release":"2026-06-24","frame_built":"2026-07-12"},"permalink":"https://metacan.xera.ac/q/f0b6fc184576","api":"https://metacan.xera.ac/api/v1/cohort?venue=Journal+of+Asian+Public+Policy"},"results":[{"id":"W1990818287","doi":"10.1080/17516230903027906","title":"Urban conflicts and the policy learning process in Hong Kong: urban conflict and policy change in the 1950s and after 1997","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Policy Transfer and Learning","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":12,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Calgary","funders":"","keywords":"Government (linguistics); Restructuring; Nexus (standard); Public policy; Human settlement; Policy learning; Population; Space (punctuation); Economic growth; Political science; Public administration; Sociology; Political economy; Economics; Engineering; Law","score_opus":0.02847754855837174,"score_gpt":0.3416463430747293,"score_spread":0.31316879451635754,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1990818287","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.6545005,0.0026595457,0.000004676091,0.31881714,0.00003312543,0.00043782045,0.0000060571792,0.00002072921,0.023520388],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98620886,0.0018719552,0.000008356118,0.008584108,0.0030722118,0.000016786233,9.3644525e-7,0.000018686103,0.00021807618],"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9965661,0.0011344118,0.00058493885,0.00024773864,0.0005669627,0.0008998476],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99871856,0.0003151248,0.00028579004,0.00015981727,0.000102719976,0.0004179605],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0031322674,0.00026718105,0.00049586815,0.0014580222,0.00050041743,0.00069338,0.00049539946,0.00018998007,0.00000938935],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00198422,0.00017434034,0.00009235085,0.0017649664,0.0009329635,0.0010622942,0.000046491463,0.0011490239,0.0000011529064],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00021450818,0.00009520745,0.14101009,0.000037913676,0.000038020287,0.000058580037,0.6746866,0.000001807446,0.000011519013,0.13786504,0.00025292742,0.04572778],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0035734996,0.0002638152,0.83801484,0.00015272437,0.000025024194,0.00023004417,0.017434131,0.000060688664,0.0000033815065,0.0030372848,0.13691996,0.0002846059],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.012381518,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0021430259,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.69700474,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001573729,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0009539245,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9941951},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2067342200","doi":"10.1080/17516230802416374","title":"Financial governance and policy learning in Korea: analysing the post-crisis experience","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Social Policy and Reform Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":3,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Carleton University","funders":"","keywords":"Corporate governance; Financial crisis; Politics; State (computer science); Government (linguistics); Situated; Political science; Geography of finance; Finance; Policy learning; Economics; Financial regulation; Economic policy","score_opus":0.022975905959738654,"score_gpt":0.32714401668789345,"score_spread":0.3041681107281548,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2067342200","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.69939905,0.0005316128,0.000011094736,0.2746463,0.00013973835,0.00007874532,0.0000026812304,0.000016475236,0.02517428],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9899516,0.0035839279,0.000044813285,0.0018527184,0.003955811,0.0000029302603,1.7341739e-7,0.000008951244,0.00059905124],"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9979501,0.00036065906,0.00045001428,0.00013103662,0.0005467773,0.000561414],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99888635,0.000117006864,0.0005022239,0.000099737495,0.00022427888,0.00017041706],"candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0010355945,0.00013493368,0.00031965913,0.0004006874,0.0015737293,0.00011765354,0.00040307315,0.00011296533,0.000007382949],"category_scores_gemma":[0.006062946,0.00009041619,0.00015453645,0.0018247274,0.0008732705,0.00075854594,0.000093813425,0.00048964407,0.0000022346373],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0000493999,0.00013458339,0.09232875,0.000011765461,0.000099159195,0.000111916605,0.5533839,0.000016031743,0.00008246873,0.2495113,0.0032531675,0.101017535],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00065819104,0.00013471508,0.87245876,0.000043217897,0.000015957183,0.00016365848,0.0655218,0.0000073675715,0.000025111352,0.011574799,0.049145333,0.0002511124],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.023146428,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0039128936,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.78012997,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00033806943,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0022603094,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99972606},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2398099269","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2015.1083412","title":"Signalling through the noise: private certification, information asymmetry and Chinese SMEs’ access to finance","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"China's Socioeconomic Reforms and Governance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":24,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Saint Paul University","funders":"","keywords":"Information asymmetry; Certification; Promotion (chess); Business; China; Quality (philosophy); Access to finance; Survey data collection; Constraint (computer-aided design); Finance; Private information retrieval; Economics","score_opus":0.034571348954835636,"score_gpt":0.3403957547329919,"score_spread":0.3058244057781562,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2398099269","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.670628,0.00020657177,0.002811616,0.2923642,0.00036047157,0.00020915565,0.000008751999,0.00001420544,0.033397026],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99529636,0.00030653775,0.0005067106,0.0025576106,0.0010629668,0.000003936875,9.649474e-7,0.0000059561517,0.00025897042],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9987834,0.00006745899,0.00046117126,0.00007740227,0.0003560369,0.0002545114],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99859166,0.000048774193,0.0007159504,0.00014512306,0.00029281667,0.00020568293],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0011902566,0.000096940144,0.00017174063,0.00012216487,0.00033879574,0.0007714257,0.0006505865,0.00006708672,0.0000095452415],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0015743765,0.000060183633,0.00006318111,0.0005754641,0.0001281929,0.0050829994,0.000089631394,0.00019588163,0.000016809681],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00008932355,0.00010204102,0.055873368,0.00003164952,0.00010232449,0.0000030743274,0.21456966,0.0005266663,0.000022561546,0.42822307,0.05918772,0.24126853],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00043438745,0.00005416197,0.1766909,0.000025016147,0.000005935237,0.000016304166,0.0031603829,0.00006382502,0.000015129549,0.05338745,0.7660082,0.00013831486],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0015651874,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00021696325,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7068205,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00036433796,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0010174243,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7438876},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2771927119","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2017.1412284","title":"The criteria for effective policy design: character and context in policy instrument choice","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Policy Transfer and Learning","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":117,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Context (archaeology); Matching (statistics); Management science; Policy analysis; Character (mathematics); Computer science; Political science; Economics; Public administration","score_opus":0.061858470304503435,"score_gpt":0.40814459880675286,"score_spread":0.34628612850224944,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2771927119","genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.13931985,0.0003965745,0.001004815,0.8137803,0.00058222905,0.0013208059,0.00003153521,0.000029524575,0.04353434],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99057025,0.00042497067,0.00012581918,0.0018349724,0.0064525623,0.000036634523,4.531405e-7,0.000022366608,0.0005320007],"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9974541,0.0006656043,0.0004935958,0.00017539476,0.00035662498,0.00085466186],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9978061,0.00071909523,0.0005014879,0.00028258463,0.00022679433,0.00046394588],"candidate_categories":["metaresearch","sts","scholarly_communication"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0032630882,0.00019118679,0.00036941512,0.0007788799,0.0020243304,0.0013851285,0.0009024253,0.00014821382,0.000010425156],"category_scores_gemma":[0.01124343,0.00014163306,0.00016640789,0.00032560198,0.0006583697,0.001311391,0.00007353912,0.0004200065,0.0000037810619],"study_design_candidate":"design_other","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001412573,0.000069230126,0.0062118075,0.000018432183,0.00009189738,0.0000052742557,0.02130048,4.7780077e-7,0.00019661491,0.20196751,0.00088356534,0.7691134],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002640588,0.00037007302,0.45529756,0.00009881316,0.000018644487,0.000039093436,0.002237301,0.000029938368,0.00009747302,0.014316496,0.52462137,0.0002326774],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.02324016,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0032088135,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.85125035,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00060928275,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0029296963,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99965155},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2837258019","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2018.1493768","title":"Framework or metaphor? Analysing the status of policy learning in the policy sciences","year":2018,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Policy Transfer and Learning","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":38,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Metaphor; CLARITY; Agency (philosophy); Field (mathematics); Subject (documents); Vocabulary; Policy analysis; Sociology; Epistemology; Data science; Political science; Computer science; Social science; Linguistics; World Wide Web; Public administration","score_opus":0.0713811081696327,"score_gpt":0.4270620044059969,"score_spread":0.35568089623636423,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2837258019","genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.26339248,0.00060136244,0.0012686646,0.4213625,0.00027047115,0.00031599536,0.00000924739,0.000047542635,0.31273174],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9890105,0.0006523281,0.00054807257,0.0029376342,0.006480824,0.0000026312482,3.2123114e-7,0.000017298169,0.00035034973],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9937123,0.002242938,0.0008702471,0.00020537259,0.0013880715,0.0015810948],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.996952,0.0012404278,0.0007120652,0.00029960106,0.0003693779,0.00042653838],"candidate_categories":["metaresearch","sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.007367875,0.00020952137,0.00046947566,0.002581148,0.0017026631,0.00060156215,0.0018403232,0.00016697243,0.0001361993],"category_scores_gemma":[0.023811387,0.000112210364,0.0003221668,0.010325382,0.0026263883,0.0008811564,0.00007712862,0.0011700616,0.00001006825],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":true,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000067068526,0.00013113441,0.017217698,0.000013403187,0.00015799784,0.000011829911,0.2388736,0.00009662715,0.00012498834,0.6220999,0.0005557835,0.120649986],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010616508,0.0013736286,0.14213784,0.00027548053,0.00013681593,0.00015997318,0.18935545,0.00014745958,0.00015114107,0.064152904,0.6005423,0.00050533324],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.046597652,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0048275264,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.72561806,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00051740283,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.01385862,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.999597},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3023379369","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2020.1749340","title":"Technological innovation and building a ‘super smart’ society: Japan’s vision of society 5.0","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"University-Industry-Government Innovation Models","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":173,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Saskatchewan","funders":"","keywords":"Commercialization; Sophistication; Government (linguistics); Humanity; Plan (archaeology); Political science; Economic growth; Management; Business; Sociology; Economics; Marketing; Social science","score_opus":0.030514105838383605,"score_gpt":0.2536971166925352,"score_spread":0.2231830108541516,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3023379369","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.822368,0.000014556345,0.010357881,0.16267394,0.00004675587,0.00009604077,0.0000032559615,0.000045807687,0.0043937345],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9882798,0.000009939033,0.0030956753,0.007728441,0.00082250655,4.3986182e-7,0.0000028697987,0.000013349993,0.000046951987],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9986169,0.000009039858,0.000514356,0.00015078478,0.00049576885,0.00021315644],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9984463,0.00001794824,0.00086194254,0.000100740064,0.0005454091,0.000027699352],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00058840157,0.00013496159,0.00024779586,0.0003975839,0.00013020138,0.00021130072,0.00029241352,0.000256363,0.00006954138],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00042969518,0.00012116783,0.00013717977,0.0027064139,0.00017079995,0.0024365948,0.00028750705,0.000560053,0.0000030912188],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000049779144,0.000218289,0.04600156,0.00024357717,0.00026220488,0.0000056824897,0.0006101204,0.000024995301,0.052396607,0.8027378,0.054652207,0.042797178],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.008651447,0.0004997171,0.08606651,0.00044317127,0.00027450893,0.000103269645,0.018418575,0.025421083,0.0031307759,0.038893837,0.8168055,0.0012916472],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000017998957,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":3.6300113e-7,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.76384395,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00012295958,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00013527046,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.49410808},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3122512365","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2021.1880047","title":"International Migration, Remittances and COVID-19: Economic Implications and Policy Options for South Asia","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Migration and Labor Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":31,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Toronto Metropolitan University; Centre for Movement Disorders","funders":"","keywords":"Remittance; Development economics; Unemployment; Shock (circulatory); Nexus (standard); Earnings; Economics; South asia; Pandemic; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Foreign exchange; Recession; International economics; Economic growth; Macroeconomics; Monetary economics; Finance","score_opus":0.02960761773857706,"score_gpt":0.3702383658344417,"score_spread":0.34063074809586463,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3122512365","genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.036307957,0.00028749384,0.009868464,0.9294927,0.00021553671,0.00016490722,0.000250996,0.00002428971,0.023387618],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98256344,0.003159207,0.0046075727,0.003722373,0.00272658,0.000015468428,0.000032466512,0.000012757594,0.0031601489],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9990593,0.00010074255,0.00036730943,0.00013909831,0.00014024954,0.00019328142],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99856615,0.00011131292,0.00035622183,0.00010105235,0.0003746633,0.00049061514],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005719989,0.000080926904,0.00014392904,0.00043017688,0.00048402458,0.00044989208,0.000188145,0.000080154816,0.0000947714],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0027663216,0.000080851256,0.0000745964,0.00035340642,0.00020030364,0.0005869943,0.000029597046,0.00009796983,0.0000016485675],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000006015798,0.0000257147,0.005756203,0.000005838555,0.000046530626,7.5614963e-7,0.010566575,0.000020056195,0.00004920957,0.9664117,0.008563229,0.008548188],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004984425,0.000024341076,0.014192131,0.0000064074984,0.000015759291,0.0000822405,0.010889047,0.00027609858,0.0000057419875,0.03108792,0.9428226,0.000099272074],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00040106146,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.013288256,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.94625545,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00041009352,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.005383837,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.95506954},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3154308847","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2021.1907653","title":"Unpacking policy portfolios: primary and secondary aspects of tool use in policy mixes","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Policy Transfer and Learning","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":48,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Unpacking; Salience (neuroscience); Policy learning; Policy analysis; Work (physics); Order (exchange); Political science; Management science; Computer science; Business; Economics; Public administration; Engineering; Artificial intelligence","score_opus":0.02474636254821718,"score_gpt":0.3139121331937105,"score_spread":0.2891657706454933,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3154308847","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.62964624,0.00076671556,0.00007634052,0.085136876,0.00015759016,0.00014698996,0.00003796338,0.000033342236,0.28399795],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9932343,0.0010601364,0.0003564426,0.0025348258,0.0021304907,0.0000016398816,0.0000034922828,0.000031836007,0.00064683094],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9965581,0.0006421208,0.00096454937,0.00024361475,0.00071521685,0.0008763397],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9981166,0.00024179654,0.00048257774,0.00025226886,0.0003747845,0.00053194276],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015401246,0.00023031786,0.0006463358,0.0026561846,0.00025535154,0.0003690625,0.00042542387,0.00021396564,0.00009040854],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0050652344,0.0002322916,0.00024774086,0.0029567722,0.0003754875,0.0019236484,0.00010669037,0.0007482179,0.000002829299],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":true,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000050308474,0.00024947117,0.038022332,0.00013102521,0.00017667975,0.00034814075,0.033215005,0.0000059981558,0.0022312081,0.81334513,0.00064650364,0.11157818],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0027035186,0.00022269365,0.7973209,0.00038755094,0.00004724655,0.0007441575,0.011497453,0.000005205297,0.0007906889,0.03729016,0.14842886,0.00056153437],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.023198813,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0043718126,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.776055,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000659781,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.018525613,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.98703843},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3216186510","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2021.2007565","title":"Fighting Covid-19 in rural communities: coordinated mobilization and reconstruction of community order in a village in Northern China","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Southeast Asian Sociopolitical Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":2,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"Government of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region","keywords":"Grassroots; China; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Pandemic; State (computer science); Order (exchange); Mobilization; Political science; State of emergency; Face (sociological concept); Power (physics); Emergency management; Economic growth; Social mobilization; 2019-20 coronavirus outbreak; Geography; Business; Sociology; Medicine; Law; Politics; Economics","score_opus":0.03241853170701193,"score_gpt":0.3372701830829692,"score_spread":0.30485165137595727,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3216186510","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.9661056,0.00013926763,0.00003503298,0.021862894,0.000057724315,0.00010529192,0.00000813308,0.000009115052,0.011676932],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9994601,0.00010210793,0.000092108305,0.00022972461,0.00008086481,0.000003095964,0.0000032450912,0.000008352942,0.000020421288],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.99657446,0.0021433835,0.00065856223,0.000047138492,0.00024259542,0.00033383118],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99865067,0.00038234427,0.0003504914,0.00012609934,0.0003027115,0.00018768825],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0020932918,0.000102459926,0.00037412992,0.00061540335,0.0003022338,0.00007099056,0.00022685013,0.00012653985,0.00005066332],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0068026306,0.00010282288,0.00005112554,0.0019053781,0.00060290657,0.00042387986,0.00010142168,0.00060710544,4.6772502e-7],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000018337607,0.00016232899,0.7200823,0.000039450326,0.000017459919,0.000008659101,0.25773823,0.000015593174,0.000013780257,0.0098570185,0.000010422599,0.012036421],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010371784,0.00003785101,0.31424642,0.00012744749,0.0000038180056,0.000041934734,0.67223006,0.00002766643,0.000004495479,0.011902167,0.00025708848,0.00008388396],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0583249,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.28782144,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.4144918,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0010065293,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0016007768,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9479458},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4323666330","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2023.2182157","title":"The impact of Vietnam’s 2013 extension of paid maternity leave on women’s labour force participation","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":4,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McGill University Health Centre; McGill University","funders":"FHI 360; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation","keywords":"Maternity leave; Vietnamese; Regression discontinuity design; Demographic economics; Formal education; Labour economics; Percentage point; Economics; Medicine; Psychology","score_opus":0.034824919744996505,"score_gpt":0.3520587817209764,"score_spread":0.31723386197597986,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4323666330","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.9879549,0.000032967433,0.000030642077,0.008362529,0.00025175742,0.00010514114,0.000031388285,0.000016381531,0.0032142967],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9975613,0.0007093635,0.000018986317,0.00010157879,0.00041090886,0.0000037523396,0.0000014914706,0.000012370786,0.0011802787],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9978738,0.0003428987,0.000550452,0.00009213825,0.0006223253,0.0005184227],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9980083,0.0001792716,0.0007470223,0.00021669272,0.00058305747,0.00026563212],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0024320316,0.00011038969,0.00026791194,0.00037337458,0.00029378393,0.0000918618,0.0003789546,0.00010098632,0.000039363713],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0015765938,0.000071533934,0.00019831842,0.000938404,0.00019425333,0.00033632395,0.00004341246,0.0001894314,0.000016977465],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0007275951,0.0013732737,0.34479323,0.00017663246,0.0009741092,0.000040089075,0.29042804,0.0025736857,0.0063261306,0.19843173,0.07093418,0.0832213],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00043442182,0.00054119603,0.96143836,0.00003486468,0.000010350168,0.0000037725808,0.023987683,0.00027977856,0.000043918888,0.010231642,0.002897945,0.00009607747],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0021009974,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00033402338,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6166451,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00040821094,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0010619371,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.31760934},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4406217628","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2024.2448035","title":"Humanitarian engagement with Myanmar in the wake of the 2021 coup","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Asian Geopolitics and Ethnography","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":2,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McGill University","funders":"","keywords":"Wake; Political science; Humanitarian crisis; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Socioeconomics; Geography; Public administration; Sociology; Law; Refugee; Medicine; Infectious disease (medical specialty)","score_opus":0.01935501295635761,"score_gpt":0.3163108045275521,"score_spread":0.2969557915711945,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4406217628","genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.080161646,0.00017460388,0.00006439648,0.26478896,0.0002739626,0.00022299231,0.0000061331525,0.0000035657972,0.6543037],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99723834,0.000021006146,0.000091844435,0.0012778066,0.0004306887,0.000002573956,2.42858e-7,0.000004352529,0.0009331174],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9982266,0.00047438042,0.00035387793,0.00007277097,0.00054251397,0.0003298975],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99909055,0.000099094206,0.00030521804,0.00023610823,0.00019277999,0.000076257624],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0023332953,0.00008214323,0.00016808505,0.0004589419,0.00041836957,0.00013379146,0.00089681166,0.000058558766,0.00007448266],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00042505932,0.000043748238,0.00014547563,0.0015710563,0.00045060844,0.00018806806,0.000053766653,0.00040856225,0.0000013184255],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000011550694,0.00018928094,0.019139541,0.000014019593,0.00010081721,0.000009214326,0.057694722,0.0000030326623,0.0000063296375,0.8980037,0.014599737,0.010228073],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006727101,0.00013037816,0.13421808,0.00013499576,0.000042730862,0.000008264447,0.1403907,0.000002729855,0.000013153381,0.04562486,0.67865825,0.00010315546],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0019032458,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0038774228,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.9170767,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000111566806,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0017833576,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3217803},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4414713901","doi":"10.1080/17516234.2025.2568589","title":"China’s ‘bad citizens’: understanding non-participation in philanthropic and voluntaristic activities","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Asian Public Policy","topic":"Nonprofit Sector and Volunteering","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Alberta","funders":"University of Alberta; Colgate University","keywords":"China; Perception; State (computer science); Civic engagement; Civil society","score_opus":0.030739868980061258,"score_gpt":0.36394141329101215,"score_spread":0.3332015443109509,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4414713901","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.8893148,0.00010680843,0.0034767527,0.027567942,0.00059476984,0.000114300245,0.0000026155997,0.00001692901,0.0788051],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99876624,0.0001370926,0.000073547126,0.00012042075,0.0005513205,0.0000019790305,3.6890057e-7,0.000006098565,0.0003429122],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99895126,0.00010938851,0.00029697426,0.00009142408,0.00022517687,0.00032580472],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99953127,0.00006415573,0.00016623057,0.000067051835,0.000045203178,0.000126078],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00063961576,0.00008520712,0.00020750758,0.00079257524,0.00026668396,0.00019243985,0.00014132597,0.000074768344,0.00003964428],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00063257536,0.00008227817,0.000049336166,0.00060976046,0.00019794652,0.0006548671,0.000032531632,0.00023175003,6.913107e-7],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000060272425,0.0001449839,0.32410586,0.000087940425,0.00010482628,0.000030635547,0.046384152,0.000008793903,0.0005398728,0.6117708,0.0015552749,0.015206599],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00077325094,0.00007795505,0.94976205,0.00019542385,0.000021736389,0.0000071119075,0.017774481,0.000105489446,0.00005455437,0.028117394,0.002973364,0.00013717054],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.006855675,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.006389206,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6256562,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00081456406,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0008580064,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99975777},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null}]}