{"meta":{"query_hash":"3bf340fea541","filters":{"venue":"Journal of Public Economics"},"cohort_total":114,"direct_labels_cover":0,"predictions_cover":114,"exported":114,"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/3bf340fea541","api":"https://metacan.xera.ac/api/v1/cohort?venue=Journal+of+Public+Economics"},"results":[{"id":"W1495047407","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2013.05.002","title":"Students' Perceptions of Teacher Biases: Experimental Economics in Schools","year":2011,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":10,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"HEC Montréal","funders":"","keywords":"Perception; Grading (engineering); Endowment; Incentive; Psychology; Socioeconomic status; Ethnic group; Gender bias; Mathematics education; Social psychology; Political science; Economics; Sociology; Demography; Population","score_opus":0.10339301262811122,"score_gpt":0.3546154862939354,"score_spread":0.2512224736658242,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1495047407","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":[0.9862629,0.00013428679,0.000006352073,0.0003863711,0.00041591673,0.00007466963,0.0000043160344,0.0000045793995,0.0127105685],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99743366,0.0010789736,0.00059019116,0.00010978141,0.00049734884,0.0000033403762,8.6593775e-7,0.000009490758,0.00027635595],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988405,0.00009954025,0.0006438445,0.000099825265,0.00008871619,0.00022758509],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990467,0.00004901985,0.0004987884,0.00013589082,0.00008761992,0.00018200897],"candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0017207761,0.00008514965,0.00024676928,0.00028583492,0.00009339918,0.00009838436,0.0005968382,0.00009756261,0.0013813438],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00016481137,0.000087627246,0.00012827237,0.00010482137,0.00011341279,0.0015594299,0.000051528503,0.000262107,0.00003470947],"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":[0.000022608532,0.00036363825,0.9830288,0.0000020955806,0.00003860252,0.0000011077691,0.0108435685,0.00003396483,0.000034610155,0.0036570402,0.0006175127,0.0013564512],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0021340502,0.0003816909,0.8102778,0.00006842429,0.000028397872,0.000018354514,0.15497696,0.00008226153,0.0005890075,0.001793801,0.029275445,0.00037378294],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0005847434,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0029787535,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.17275098,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003627949,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0004811745,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9995315},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1529583694","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.05.002","title":"Commitment and matching contributions to public goods","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":50,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa; Queen's University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Public good; Commit; Matching (statistics); Economics; Public goods game; Microeconomics; Focus (optics); Public economics","score_opus":0.05846319174969902,"score_gpt":0.37008096427473475,"score_spread":0.31161777252503575,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1529583694","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":[0.957381,0.00036406727,0.0009240502,0.02553905,0.00072099734,0.0001517871,0.000019510102,0.000014080814,0.014885429],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99623996,0.0003589483,0.0021728543,0.00065458316,0.00040126327,0.0000028110408,0.0000011514102,0.000009601791,0.00015880444],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99875605,0.000065603264,0.0005682508,0.00011826444,0.00008370067,0.00040810477],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99866945,0.00016852304,0.00035700624,0.00009845073,0.0001860552,0.0005205069],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0032866963,0.000098397584,0.00026283984,0.00023043867,0.00049669575,0.00034651218,0.00026565464,0.00007082531,0.00004859896],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00024039678,0.00010276636,0.00008535616,0.00010537449,0.00016966465,0.00079263066,0.00012928365,0.00016524259,0.000014342745],"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":[0.000021357404,0.0002456096,0.10889739,0.0000033009399,0.00015497707,0.000008882011,0.010614687,0.000012155433,0.00040510562,0.85425353,0.0030623116,0.0223207],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0018352696,0.00044948535,0.03948853,0.000026377105,0.00005299274,0.00006801618,0.077608965,0.00001087242,0.00074460654,0.029692747,0.84943324,0.00058887363],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00028528,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0045334753,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.84637094,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0011508551,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00025848422,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.41906905},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1556374755","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2015.05.005","title":"Donor coordination in project funding: Evidence from a threshold public goods experiment","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":82,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Queen's University","funders":"Queen's University; Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca; University of Miami","keywords":"Public good; Popularity; Salient; Economics; Public economics; Microeconomics; Public finance; Business; Marketing; Political science; Macroeconomics","score_opus":0.317671617904195,"score_gpt":0.40518470935819084,"score_spread":0.08751309145399583,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1556374755","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":[0.97564656,0.0020098446,0.000036377416,0.013037474,0.0012375371,0.00026983165,0.000006453853,0.000018853807,0.0077370605],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9972401,0.00052829226,0.0013054886,0.00012604131,0.0005214442,0.000027266755,0.0000028398954,0.000017767552,0.00023071347],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.99805087,0.00019519721,0.0008576408,0.00024563711,0.0002007215,0.00044991265],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99829614,0.0001713524,0.00077726215,0.00018488962,0.00023164402,0.00033868468],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0034342636,0.00016535926,0.00041476224,0.0004283673,0.00016990806,0.0005763772,0.00063112,0.00012656352,0.00006558685],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006663466,0.00017053589,0.00013065223,0.00024939625,0.00021473509,0.0033159303,0.00017365933,0.00024574084,0.000019042389],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.00009397557,0.0006205263,0.88060313,0.000005299176,0.00013634218,0.000018217013,0.054163773,0.00007182646,0.0006783327,0.048446797,0.009485773,0.0056760064],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.010905428,0.0023161988,0.039105374,0.00045172148,0.00013548463,0.000053756947,0.5266942,0.0022847785,0.0054090167,0.03486167,0.3751412,0.002641167],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0033525198,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.007739797,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8414978,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.003336679,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0015416783,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.87253},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1566788579","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2011.12.004","title":"Are women pawns in the political game? Evidence from elections to the Spanish Senate","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender Politics and Representation","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":142,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"NOMINATE; Nomination; Ballot; Politics; Competition (biology); Legislature; Representation (politics); Political science; Economics; Quality (philosophy); Political economy; Demographic economics; Law; Voting","score_opus":0.12872742035284088,"score_gpt":0.35271504396476716,"score_spread":0.22398762361192628,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1566788579","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":[0.8887067,0.00009461518,0.00010775371,0.10793779,0.0005744825,0.00007453879,0.0000044593935,0.0000025408403,0.0024971305],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9954188,0.00009563482,0.000050560368,0.0026037565,0.0016999326,0.000005492077,2.1674855e-7,0.0000040939535,0.00012154791],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9987724,0.00031908322,0.0002626609,0.00006001783,0.00013014405,0.0004556945],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989551,0.00036059108,0.00021890801,0.000119553406,0.000091233655,0.0002546305],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0022265676,0.000048343292,0.00009950792,0.00007616435,0.00018662737,0.0002731706,0.00036694942,0.000044830686,0.000056048626],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00087084464,0.000029993858,0.000056797056,0.00013743737,0.000069123846,0.0005178044,0.000030613315,0.0002037579,0.000022896706],"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":[0.000008192155,0.00017200934,0.46470356,0.0000028077015,0.000070348106,0.0000029112698,0.10861481,0.00018317904,0.000032909207,0.41990268,0.005159618,0.0011469716],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00016259935,0.000032098604,0.5679035,0.00001631911,0.000015948212,0.000019193252,0.25834164,0.000062420426,0.000039222938,0.035174467,0.1381244,0.00010816568],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.001678618,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0054568993,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.3847282,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00040347548,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00024243318,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3045078},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1964652554","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2014.09.009","title":"Testing motives for charitable giving: A revealed-preference methodology with experimental evidence","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":17,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Preference; Revealed preference; Econometrics; Positive economics; Microeconomics; Public economics; Psychology","score_opus":0.5051004921055419,"score_gpt":0.41413599127870226,"score_spread":0.0909645008268396,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1964652554","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":[0.98955554,0.0015393995,0.0023719117,0.002162631,0.00056095095,0.00024374978,0.0000037152531,0.000020152625,0.0035419248],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.8846536,0.00021180288,0.114128225,0.00018042098,0.0004357691,0.000029253479,3.4444372e-7,0.000018077051,0.00034245398],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.998307,0.00035557977,0.0005877887,0.00023995298,0.00008840404,0.00042127763],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9959895,0.0023333088,0.00089384255,0.00015425742,0.00042377994,0.00020533607],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00487439,0.00015482493,0.00050869974,0.00019258769,0.00041303653,0.00017556682,0.0005090798,0.00008337862,0.00003385058],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0039506797,0.00013985341,0.00010383778,0.00013558847,0.00043047243,0.001524388,0.000100342004,0.00015839042,0.0000042103766],"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":[0.00039654132,0.0006553783,0.35783806,0.00013835859,0.0006585297,0.000008227428,0.06578423,0.00040012607,0.034700196,0.5042992,0.0014835303,0.033637624],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.012941309,0.02103304,0.042964075,0.0025107637,0.000599182,0.0006281123,0.5388534,0.0034694104,0.07976188,0.12834099,0.16380925,0.005088565],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00014119703,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00028632846,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.4730692,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00059428904,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00040491394,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.57030565},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1967201766","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(01)00155-4","title":"Economic versus political symmetry and the welfare concern with market integration and tax competition","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":13,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Economics; Politics; Welfare; Competition (biology); Economic integration; Tax competition; International economics; Public economics; Macroeconomics; Ad valorem tax; Market economy; Double taxation; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.020050415686646797,"score_gpt":0.253755401859707,"score_spread":0.23370498617306024,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1967201766","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":[0.8969132,0.00020909762,0.0017192195,0.023970116,0.00052829634,0.00013955722,0.000010157602,0.0000053371728,0.07650506],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9984825,0.00092273904,0.00014765568,0.00019459167,0.00012531967,0.0000010624227,0.0000010178355,0.000003988749,0.00012112411],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99935836,0.00015060675,0.00020605004,0.00007042989,0.000067353634,0.00014719725],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994131,0.00015755717,0.00022869857,0.000045646844,0.000050028735,0.00010498012],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009512731,0.000055374956,0.00012836028,0.000033321438,0.00019254014,0.0002167424,0.0000638558,0.000047376474,0.00012477052],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00019587816,0.000038021444,0.00002569354,0.000032738673,0.00034559384,0.0005356111,0.000008750735,0.00008411063,0.0000011686957],"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":[0.000102325066,0.000007916219,0.008127095,0.0000015934692,0.000018619538,4.3026768e-7,0.00023107423,0.000004886652,1.5691623e-7,0.9897493,0.00023246596,0.0015241411],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.01903331,0.00071493187,0.044912614,0.0000690022,0.00018370351,0.00012154981,0.060852867,0.0026826812,0.00008463264,0.076266006,0.7945568,0.00052192545],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013234481,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0012935231,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.91348326,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002778061,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001671681,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.20900519},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1968164432","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(00)00081-5","title":"Property tax limits, local fiscal behavior, and property values: evidence from Massachusetts under Proposition","year":2001,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Housing Market and Economics","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":171,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Economic Research Institute; University of British Columbia; Harvard University","keywords":"Property tax; California Proposition 13; Economics; Property value; Capitalization; Referendum; Revenue; Ad valorem tax; Proposition; Property (philosophy); Tax revenue; Public economics; Tax reform; Monetary economics; Demographic economics; Macroeconomics; Finance; Law; Political science; Real estate","score_opus":0.07724602955735825,"score_gpt":0.2397412711532568,"score_spread":0.16249524159589857,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1968164432","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":[0.96461964,0.0013291497,0.014476323,0.009553895,0.0010945835,0.00033726494,0.000074315896,0.000032383698,0.008482423],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9869194,0.0076940977,0.0027338504,0.00046440208,0.00065449043,0.000015511843,0.000014059398,0.0000616933,0.0014425127],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9973337,0.00006986591,0.0015602271,0.000502332,0.000051863884,0.00048198734],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99772817,0.00012792452,0.0012802645,0.00038561414,0.00011578151,0.0003622393],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0018991329,0.00029787893,0.0007596272,0.00036021444,0.00018864869,0.00057225255,0.00047513106,0.00026972697,0.00043668435],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002133282,0.00022874106,0.00021846524,0.00013711998,0.00022202234,0.0024424149,0.0001128874,0.000469588,0.00014439542],"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":[0.00032909669,0.0007220918,0.8550882,0.00005766131,0.00037350907,0.000067433444,0.0007794696,0.0011414936,0.00008906215,0.005657911,0.0069747698,0.12871934],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0073009995,0.002207431,0.4385317,0.0005889683,0.00035091073,0.0017060443,0.0019051055,0.08640462,0.00033869882,0.093571424,0.36378935,0.0033047644],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00032809668,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002925815,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.41655648,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00064271194,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00017637886,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.932779},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1971626598","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2011.01.002","title":"Reassessment of the Tiebout model","year":2011,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":79,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa; Queen's University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Tiebout model; Fiscal federalism; Economics; Normative; Federalism; Point (geometry); Public economics; State (computer science); Competition (biology); Government (linguistics); Macroeconomics; Neoclassical economics; Decentralization; Public good; Politics; Law; Political science; Market economy","score_opus":0.12072814467852791,"score_gpt":0.28054086426238184,"score_spread":0.15981271958385393,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1971626598","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":[0.87977844,0.000046084606,0.0056397812,0.0019324728,0.00055732427,0.00006676052,0.0000028121278,0.0000029277903,0.11197339],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.998263,0.00044114818,0.00059669587,0.00016144826,0.00007506604,3.3759312e-7,9.239382e-8,0.0000027879476,0.0004594461],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99943125,0.00004273593,0.00027101664,0.000036024354,0.00011695248,0.00010204616],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99925834,0.000013823031,0.00049484026,0.000081095954,0.00009917554,0.000052743955],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007192144,0.000031502954,0.000088589535,0.000022520991,0.000067755835,0.000023744136,0.0002640985,0.00003686413,0.00007862841],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00006886959,0.000022356076,0.000077762874,0.000056425488,0.000073732954,0.0003906043,0.000024441411,0.000054125525,0.0000014173343],"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":[0.00000875496,0.00009568569,0.07765767,0.000002678855,0.00002322828,2.349147e-7,0.0039866506,0.00019778196,0.000005833481,0.9056007,0.0018580379,0.010562741],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001782015,0.0002522113,0.43276882,0.000077805074,0.00010952289,0.0000097744805,0.011677416,0.009142356,0.0011201404,0.41267076,0.12999469,0.000394481],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000059421316,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00015188636,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.49292994,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001561229,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0004697008,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.09116543},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1972615491","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.03.003","title":"Sorting and inequality in Canadian schools","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":30,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Sorting; Inequality; Endogeneity; Disadvantaged; Variance (accounting); Educational inequality; Instrumental variable; Test (biology); Demographic economics; Econometrics; Economics; Psychology; Mathematics; Economic growth","score_opus":0.061323625922150474,"score_gpt":0.33382293257460793,"score_spread":0.2724993066524575,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1972615491","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":[0.9780518,0.00013007717,0.000017274702,0.006430289,0.00024395072,0.000026417109,7.8696667e-7,0.0000020677571,0.0150973275],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9982446,0.00030708645,0.00024873565,0.0004836888,0.00065419567,1.6400293e-7,2.255733e-7,0.0000029053137,0.00005842083],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9991293,0.00004451,0.00039219,0.000052558706,0.000056379467,0.00032507768],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991038,0.00008470993,0.00023971466,0.000047815163,0.00007749471,0.0004465063],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.008128332,0.000038657072,0.00011162879,0.0002596319,0.00012996721,0.00014143444,0.00014366247,0.000066154054,0.000050250328],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0007942307,0.00003958778,0.000025718819,0.00012405544,0.000036541656,0.00091387925,0.00000984054,0.00024187584,0.0000049669566],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000002523763,0.000004511899,0.97752106,0.0000016415838,0.0000039589972,0.0000036132355,0.0010754692,0.0000063930706,0.000002004,0.008437518,0.00017366512,0.01276761],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00033642436,0.000023947397,0.83520424,0.00001529926,0.000002767767,0.0000104125875,0.0075390716,0.000051517458,0.000012737101,0.005239451,0.15146092,0.00010321543],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.15118033,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.9511298,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.79994947,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00040846044,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0012136276,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.85447204},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1973718554","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(01)00169-4","title":"The retirement-consumption puzzle: a marital bargaining approach","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":165,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"University of British Columbia","keywords":"Economics; Consumption (sociology); Wife; Demographic economics; Panel Study of Income Dynamics; Permanent income hypothesis; Panel data; Marital status; Labour economics; Sample (material); Life-cycle hypothesis; Demography; Econometrics; Population; Macroeconomics","score_opus":0.0645038979635905,"score_gpt":0.2791512958189237,"score_spread":0.21464739785533316,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1973718554","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":[0.8322071,0.0006584617,0.00268979,0.0013893063,0.0014785782,0.00013484593,0.000003885692,0.000015640177,0.16142242],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99312836,0.0025668761,0.002950143,0.00016409071,0.0003489936,0.000002554222,0.0000016346878,0.000012624017,0.00082472456],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9985942,0.00028680282,0.00047610374,0.00011310085,0.00016597899,0.00036379253],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99883753,0.00016206483,0.00046561193,0.00014910704,0.00019414713,0.0001915598],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004569262,0.000092131246,0.00016130522,0.00009133447,0.000790078,0.00048897637,0.00038342175,0.00010324701,0.000041861458],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00059653836,0.00007505585,0.00012090522,0.00011712787,0.00019745684,0.0005676032,0.000024171439,0.0002566456,0.0000093286635],"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":[0.000006290244,0.00006847657,0.20894705,0.000004141245,0.00008518247,0.00000165647,0.0034915484,0.000101955084,0.000005233278,0.7817375,0.0011753029,0.0043756855],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0020271302,0.00016189273,0.08137027,0.000019372832,0.000089974266,0.00008908559,0.1207132,0.0029984107,0.000008216637,0.06031865,0.7315912,0.0006125454],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000022777207,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0003395455,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.73041594,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003180376,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0005313875,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6076721},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1974451173","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.08.002","title":"Two-tier public provision: Comparing public systems","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":12,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Public economics; Public good; Microeconomics","score_opus":0.08364873009974132,"score_gpt":0.23785589367807727,"score_spread":0.15420716357833597,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1974451173","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":[0.8098055,0.0009336542,0.0009428802,0.010771602,0.006654518,0.00023188764,0.00006562696,0.00004818769,0.17054616],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.995297,0.00007868493,0.0009038649,0.0005122165,0.0026914428,0.000013448143,0.00001369054,0.000073125935,0.00041652686],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99573576,0.000052472926,0.0027022832,0.00050233275,0.00006183385,0.00094528537],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99528563,0.00015118753,0.0027977866,0.0007233713,0.00022274346,0.000819268],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","scholarly_communication"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0041928245,0.00036419003,0.0012419389,0.0012430612,0.00026827972,0.0016808023,0.0013337703,0.0003078881,0.00037566206],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000757285,0.00039796522,0.00046090898,0.00030414618,0.00020714341,0.0035116205,0.00023923877,0.0011520003,0.00061294565],"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":[0.000009176365,0.00016365491,0.1522603,0.000028612058,0.00018037923,0.0000044161193,0.00011977276,0.000048360853,0.000019091294,0.84230804,0.003572762,0.0012854122],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0032808105,0.0002159474,0.018238302,0.00002038321,0.000018639239,0.0005277408,0.00038651188,0.024225552,0.00003243044,0.16682014,0.7852989,0.0009346701],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00006419778,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00015017242,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7817261,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003829699,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00032739987,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99984723},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1975101123","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.02.002","title":"Do dropouts drop out too soon? Wealth, health and happiness from compulsory schooling","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":585,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canadian Institute for Advanced Research","funders":"","keywords":"Drop out; Economics; Happiness; Incentive; Dropout (neural networks); School dropout; Demographic economics; Labour economics; Psychology; Social psychology; Microeconomics","score_opus":0.11875085558392787,"score_gpt":0.3828501754017472,"score_spread":0.2640993198178193,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1975101123","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":[0.9215738,0.0021219493,0.0028301305,0.066233896,0.002756721,0.0000679403,0.000012644066,0.000008915668,0.0043939883],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98849666,0.0016805959,0.0022454867,0.0032520436,0.0036839095,7.767659e-7,0.000008262542,0.00000738309,0.00062485447],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99864215,0.00011852374,0.0006878882,0.000121565165,0.00015292976,0.00027691893],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9983362,0.00027168085,0.000572372,0.00006483479,0.00038848032,0.00036643413],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003448802,0.00008506138,0.00025515904,0.00014174367,0.0005540933,0.00021666104,0.00017890084,0.00005718349,0.00006722091],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004094433,0.000080620935,0.00006947448,0.00006257294,0.00012923357,0.0005003676,0.000037584705,0.00018400703,0.000012995622],"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":[0.000089235,0.0003842269,0.20069854,0.0000419081,0.00037197993,0.000005331203,0.09822411,0.00013659976,0.00004834222,0.6024664,0.055468585,0.042064723],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0009200063,0.00018710985,0.04744094,0.00008183775,0.000020002391,0.000018046661,0.12515481,0.00027991296,0.000028264907,0.089067385,0.7363813,0.00042041528],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0011093613,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.004347125,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6809127,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00039174026,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0012630967,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.42616934},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1987149948","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(99)00118-8","title":"The value of genetic information in the life insurance market","year":2000,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Insurance, Mortality, Demography, Risk Management","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":106,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Guelph","funders":"Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst","keywords":"Adverse selection; Economics; Incentive; Ex-ante; Life insurance; Value (mathematics); Microeconomics; Information asymmetry; Actuarial science; Private information retrieval; Selection (genetic algorithm); Value of information; Mathematical economics; Computer science","score_opus":0.014624350182147541,"score_gpt":0.24776714239554984,"score_spread":0.23314279221340228,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1987149948","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":[0.9356277,0.00034033423,0.000030050305,0.0058456105,0.000343901,0.0001665769,0.00000502588,0.0000032530852,0.057637572],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9918636,0.0070044217,0.0001605227,0.0006912933,0.00018388814,0.0000040822492,3.548976e-7,0.0000034304423,0.0000883734],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9983145,0.00039293262,0.00078858197,0.000050105176,0.0002344799,0.00021937671],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987862,0.00021784203,0.00062723376,0.00018881846,0.00011878688,0.00006107823],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0056782085,0.00006733073,0.00014997428,0.00013889022,0.00023005875,0.0002607167,0.00076924945,0.00004861849,0.00011956769],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00025999863,0.000044902674,0.000118915676,0.00026580726,0.00022383302,0.0009931644,0.000017829434,0.00017228599,0.000009369879],"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":[0.00006019071,0.000119219876,0.68225855,0.000021667029,0.00013106319,0.000002149034,0.010824939,0.004116341,2.0181028e-7,0.07526182,0.010582438,0.21662144],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00022550901,0.000023446975,0.7100518,0.0000059099375,0.0000068611826,0.0000020850914,0.002779395,0.000361374,3.0228702e-7,0.0038413615,0.28265545,0.000046526373],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00028073782,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0010274076,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.272073,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007025223,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00025136725,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.2514097},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1988622545","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2003.10.008","title":"Term limits and pork barrel politics","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Electoral Systems and Political Participation","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":70,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Government of Canada","funders":"","keywords":"Ideology; Welfare; Politics; Term (time); Democracy; Economics; Public economics; Value (mathematics); Voter registration; Business; Political economy; Political science; Voting; Market economy; Law; Computer science","score_opus":0.07109990861988423,"score_gpt":0.32876553059734637,"score_spread":0.2576656219774621,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1988622545","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":[0.97676814,0.00012757751,0.00011749565,0.01586047,0.000402888,0.000041402447,0.0000020987031,0.0000061168203,0.00667382],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99815005,0.00008251374,0.00020729909,0.00030359477,0.0010116365,5.4793264e-7,3.787427e-7,0.00000524412,0.00023870937],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99922717,0.00005894662,0.0003284284,0.0000553793,0.00007303055,0.00025702582],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99920356,0.00007080132,0.00020854118,0.000051673025,0.00011853842,0.0003468724],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007682302,0.00005032162,0.0001388983,0.0000686538,0.00015878114,0.00015537682,0.000101896156,0.00007147058,0.0000289226],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00029926753,0.00004650122,0.000048483467,0.000052451505,0.00010813434,0.0004281593,0.0000091975935,0.000103878556,0.000009109292],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0000015273899,0.000031113734,0.049912747,0.0000049782743,0.000017617116,0.0000021073797,0.0010439071,0.000019889592,0.000019428764,0.9472987,0.00018425126,0.001463745],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0021473644,0.000567738,0.24009576,0.00009870836,0.000071817645,0.000102839156,0.002443473,0.000044728284,0.00030802708,0.5060935,0.24752697,0.000499047],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00060687505,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0011849646,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.44120517,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00023783243,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00043730525,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.18962647},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1988863383","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2005.11.005","title":"The progressivity of equalization payments in federations","year":2006,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":9,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université de Montréal; Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on Organizations","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Jurisdiction; Social welfare function; Population; Per capita; Public finance; Microeconomics; Public good; Subsidy; Welfare; Order (exchange); Competition (biology); Public economics; Macroeconomics; Finance; Law; Market economy","score_opus":0.02799644291005553,"score_gpt":0.2920998052826194,"score_spread":0.2641033623725639,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1988863383","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":[0.98478895,0.00017832346,0.0024636886,0.004457394,0.0002974903,0.00009434416,0.000002100898,0.00000263624,0.0077150837],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99898046,0.0005611751,0.00009048363,0.00003165318,0.00012605016,0.0000011976701,0.0000015390477,0.0000022157622,0.00020522672],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9992618,0.00009192936,0.0003810214,0.000035928257,0.0001189616,0.00011036321],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992366,0.00007105121,0.0005200377,0.000042977234,0.00010506332,0.000024279696],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0011403345,0.000029043327,0.00007489637,0.000036397003,0.00017329614,0.00013581058,0.00011350201,0.000033683034,0.000012332],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00019225472,0.00002226103,0.0000333459,0.00011330234,0.00006746434,0.00051129336,0.000009300209,0.000040332405,8.155086e-7],"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":[0.000005828117,0.00013255645,0.32219985,0.0000023101545,0.000006651659,4.491259e-7,0.00049378286,0.0009136098,0.000016782506,0.6635745,0.0014403325,0.011213303],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001620698,0.00013485407,0.36685905,0.00005131213,0.000018629842,0.000002356927,0.004399885,0.003207757,0.0006822946,0.115195855,0.5076109,0.00021640077],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00015650762,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.005535141,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5483787,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00019012662,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00024099374,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.30887386},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1990267514","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2005.02.001","title":"Corrigendum to “Equivalent-expenditure functions and equivalent-dependent equivalence scales”","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"erratum","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Economics of Agriculture and Food Markets","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Equivalence (formal languages); Economics; Econometrics; Mathematical economics; Mathematics; Pure mathematics","score_opus":0.050592049949850594,"score_gpt":0.23476326821562737,"score_spread":0.1841712182657768,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1990267514","genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"other","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"other","genre_consensus":"other","domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.053489633,0.10201418,0.0030843415,0.03541657,0.26662126,0.0020685957,0.0063663456,0.00018613857,0.53075296],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.106448,0.06479746,0.002784991,0.0042078886,0.03503392,0.00009399542,0.0006273214,0.0005092287,0.7854972],"study_design_codex":"not_applicable","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99403626,0.00006423502,0.0034323416,0.0011633442,0.00013444011,0.0011693938],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9930996,0.00009719443,0.004327034,0.00092923583,0.00030862674,0.0012383553],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.0025176269,0.0009004153,0.0022349313,0.0016100903,0.00030468806,0.0009555049,0.0016827353,0.0012053112,0.0014191187],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00037462913,0.0009687328,0.0008466842,0.00024550178,0.0001652874,0.001819814,0.0006984287,0.0021484736,0.0009318565],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00005482716,0.0002667266,0.002220978,0.00012815956,0.00075499155,0.000022646112,0.00018172128,0.00006286472,0.0000067411133,0.02314289,0.9669694,0.006188085],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0009809787,0.0006481423,0.0035064507,0.00012620058,0.00009091062,0.00039608573,0.00038415086,0.00010462715,0.000005130379,0.0053864727,0.9872736,0.0010972958],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000033809996,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00041601722,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.25474423,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.001252835,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00038828567,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99984604},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1990736050","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.08.003","title":"Welfare rankings from multivariate data, a nonparametric approach","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Income, Poverty, and Inequality","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":30,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council","keywords":"Social planner; Nonparametric statistics; Data envelopment analysis; Weighting; Economics; Welfare; Econometrics; Multivariate statistics; Incentive; Social Welfare; Measure (data warehouse); Public economics; Computer science; Microeconomics; Mathematics; Statistics; Data mining","score_opus":0.08000601884022815,"score_gpt":0.31664299404618,"score_spread":0.23663697520595187,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1990736050","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":[0.94854534,0.00007797711,0.002076612,0.006939496,0.0031882897,0.000117905016,0.00012575721,0.000020839565,0.038907763],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98486644,0.000115295785,0.012348103,0.00036303204,0.0020888564,0.0000010157603,0.000029768178,0.00001385224,0.00017363702],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9983374,0.00020974794,0.00067237054,0.0002252878,0.00021479187,0.00034039252],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9978502,0.0002741356,0.0008508865,0.00048248394,0.0002601794,0.00028213332],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0053501367,0.00011922691,0.00035262533,0.00024955432,0.00037899494,0.000466594,0.0015080435,0.00020926846,0.000554918],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0020738274,0.000107252934,0.000132494,0.00025375458,0.00017012986,0.001946295,0.00017017513,0.00063563074,0.000024595396],"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":[0.00014247562,0.0015480941,0.16488719,0.000034769328,0.00072255323,0.000016069727,0.018205311,0.00007335419,0.00022914945,0.6690638,0.015021648,0.1300556],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0014213396,0.000045082077,0.043063376,0.000005290445,0.00005041367,0.000010739649,0.0036765179,0.0039293845,0.000015546111,0.011014526,0.9364514,0.00031639438],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.004570007,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0022045341,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.92142975,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00014483773,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0005109858,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6908514},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1995187414","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.07.001","title":"Public input competition","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":78,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"Competition (biology); Economics; Economic rent; Nash equilibrium; Investment (military); Microeconomics; Public investment; Economies of agglomeration; Simple (philosophy); Symmetric equilibrium; Public good; Game theory; Equilibrium selection; Repeated game","score_opus":0.06072870734590684,"score_gpt":0.2660668253238144,"score_spread":0.20533811797790757,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1995187414","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":[0.8745795,0.00013999586,0.019305063,0.0497269,0.0012484628,0.000086665445,0.000004110184,0.000020111078,0.054889172],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.996748,0.0013834509,0.00050405815,0.00066861295,0.0005335856,5.709057e-7,0.0000023211705,0.0000052246405,0.00015420916],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9991987,0.00004912831,0.0003248168,0.00006420739,0.00015819207,0.00020497965],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991802,0.000025951826,0.00039564833,0.00006538409,0.00017483732,0.00015800657],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00093545095,0.000050761224,0.00012014321,0.00008859,0.00016513237,0.00024860335,0.00020898701,0.000066319975,0.00017628103],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000262224,0.000050121293,0.00007560848,0.00013746698,0.00008940089,0.0014325783,0.000016634569,0.00009271764,0.0000325071],"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":[0.0000030532808,0.000076585486,0.0090792235,0.0000016589681,0.000013098138,0.0000019827087,0.00060703594,0.00022522754,0.0000060790726,0.9838626,0.0005745533,0.005548924],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001096326,0.00010009591,0.0087506175,0.00001702857,0.000009704365,0.000013927095,0.0016906066,0.000036343245,0.00007760289,0.10080044,0.88726646,0.00014082532],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00006120736,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00068121677,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8866919,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00066448253,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00069236924,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.23972876},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1998577083","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.02.001","title":"Volunteering a public service: an experimental investigation","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":19,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McMaster University; University of New Brunswick","funders":"McMaster University; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Ecolab","keywords":"Subgame perfect equilibrium; Public good; Economics; Microeconomics; Subgame; Attrition; Perfection; Stochastic game; Nash equilibrium; Mathematical economics; Game theory; Repeated game; Equilibrium selection","score_opus":0.09846419142234707,"score_gpt":0.33249991245153954,"score_spread":0.23403572102919246,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W1998577083","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":[0.98406225,0.00032117122,0.0000332428,0.010780982,0.0008329367,0.00011316678,0.00000362078,0.00003204734,0.003820588],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9960873,0.00013116845,0.0024540424,0.0006886005,0.0005644229,0.000007472766,0.0000037648863,0.000021708705,0.00004149054],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.99864036,0.00008437978,0.0006042974,0.00017295955,0.0001299073,0.0003681032],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99856895,0.00002441516,0.00055588456,0.00015315537,0.00023544738,0.00046215765],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0011578467,0.0001404437,0.00026827288,0.00022863214,0.00042224873,0.00048286852,0.0005006695,0.00010336351,0.00010473092],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000072617266,0.00015736301,0.000107532236,0.00016786088,0.00021980966,0.003701286,0.00009301909,0.00018794867,0.000031471372],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","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":[0.000045627847,0.0012391865,0.13767149,0.000018040915,0.00025864167,0.00002355093,0.13834234,0.0009802054,0.02057784,0.69522643,0.00052079844,0.0050958456],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.012559175,0.0027104814,0.025016036,0.00016743399,0.0001399153,0.0003340756,0.6630707,0.00064421364,0.06254103,0.08311323,0.1465074,0.003196306],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00089286134,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0050244676,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.61211324,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0017548017,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0008619187,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6417078},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2002333310","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2013.12.007","title":"Honor among tax havens","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corporate Taxation and Avoidance","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":28,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"Tax haven; Economics; Tax avoidance; Indirect tax; Ad valorem tax; Value-added tax; Tax reform; State income tax; Double taxation; International taxation; International economics; Public economics; Monetary economics","score_opus":0.023727108919093458,"score_gpt":0.19083987062826302,"score_spread":0.16711276170916955,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2002333310","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":[0.9604328,0.000012939578,0.0022967684,0.0048721773,0.00077942584,0.0000369841,7.2511585e-7,0.000016045175,0.031552088],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9946559,0.00001441513,0.00027375968,0.0016853062,0.0024606765,7.746152e-7,0.0000023897587,0.000013252984,0.0008935171],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99930745,0.000008562646,0.0003957787,0.0000830168,0.00005734703,0.00014784062],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99831456,0.000027276357,0.0013003569,0.00012025154,0.00021201199,0.000025560454],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00084472296,0.00008358047,0.00017741208,0.00024066238,0.000071229726,0.00047009115,0.00023573401,0.000038787766,0.000283051],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00024400646,0.00007652617,0.00009803829,0.00010920232,0.0000359739,0.0019745415,0.000051682404,0.00012866534,0.00016629134],"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":[0.000022147507,0.00013909278,0.5481139,0.00005761584,0.00007326343,0.0000060526036,0.00004239923,0.001011115,0.00012972066,0.33193186,0.05663661,0.06183622],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006253564,0.000013299579,0.10344241,0.00001485123,0.000016872245,0.000007705619,0.00009696036,0.011894957,0.000021388194,0.013577817,0.8701309,0.00015748235],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000024595583,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00020472787,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.81349427,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000042194206,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000038089493,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.45330998},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2010525253","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2008.10.007","title":"Getting the word out: Enforcement information dissemination and compliance behavior","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Taxation and Compliance Studies","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":150,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"McMaster University","keywords":"Taxpayer; Audit; Enforcement; Compliance (psychology); Business; Evasion (ethics); Accounting; Tax evasion; Public economics; Economics; Political science; Law; Psychology; Medicine","score_opus":0.09664380602149338,"score_gpt":0.26565055857832676,"score_spread":0.1690067525568334,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2010525253","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":[0.96672773,0.0010996338,0.0070621558,0.0055700005,0.00085004733,0.00017656559,0.000028379438,0.000011631137,0.018473875],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9972336,0.0012332838,0.0006255947,0.00037002805,0.00013203558,0.000009853705,0.000003816378,0.00000537339,0.00038635702],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99896884,0.000008570371,0.0007813898,0.000074656076,0.000027223175,0.00013929131],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99832386,0.000052336156,0.0013514261,0.000113820846,0.000102477214,0.000056057583],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005999761,0.00008397147,0.00021261498,0.00014953602,0.00024677443,0.00013018832,0.00017163219,0.00003267922,0.000081354396],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00015345475,0.00007447645,0.00006873608,0.00006466001,0.000076272205,0.0012002611,0.00004795271,0.00012785474,0.000057807392],"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":[0.000021849499,0.00012483743,0.5329221,0.000038837523,0.00016392127,0.0000027766275,0.0093685165,0.00022433182,0.000008144777,0.37028697,0.007857972,0.07897973],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006273936,0.00007051727,0.67651546,0.000022088952,0.000009425726,0.00010715677,0.0015576332,0.0016869081,0.000019600786,0.005371924,0.3137987,0.00021322076],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000072909697,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000098659475,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.36491504,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00011090645,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000023669134,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.30370614},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2010732054","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.02.001","title":"Breaking the cycle? The effect of education on welfare receipt among children of welfare recipients","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":38,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Receipt; Graduation (instrument); Welfare; Endogeneity; Economics; Demographic economics; Econometrics; Mathematics","score_opus":0.010691734521931543,"score_gpt":0.2649600069954881,"score_spread":0.25426827247355654,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2010732054","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":[0.9806754,0.000098325385,0.000042082243,0.005026246,0.0015424187,0.00021610761,0.000009673831,0.000004896953,0.012384863],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9991065,0.00019734424,0.00005300393,0.000097235374,0.00045833693,0.000001481422,0.0000034457858,0.000012490432,0.0000701218],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9984731,0.00030099007,0.00063212216,0.00010996026,0.0002270849,0.0002567507],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99784046,0.000301422,0.0012412725,0.0002497915,0.00025983955,0.00010721722],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0054503796,0.00011195609,0.0002564632,0.00017555691,0.0004400676,0.00008474297,0.00070490246,0.00011896095,0.000036061243],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00047068103,0.000069452624,0.00019238125,0.0002570535,0.00025601327,0.00033365347,0.000041825584,0.00029117987,0.0000012633905],"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":[0.00003498373,0.00008043645,0.92073685,0.00000765615,0.00010695639,2.2005268e-7,0.004009296,0.0003000553,0.0000039305833,0.026659794,0.00020643754,0.047853366],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00029397305,0.00017330344,0.98503953,0.00002906622,0.0000389822,0.0000057543684,0.008681791,0.00003458112,0.000032865308,0.00051523995,0.0050796554,0.000075244774],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00064414926,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001495917,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.064302675,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00024710255,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00023047572,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.33846888},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2017658601","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.09.001","title":"Erratum to “Competition, incentives, and public school productivity” [J. Public Econ. 88 (9–10) (2004) 1871–1892]","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"erratum","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":8,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Productivity; Incentive; Competition (biology); Economics; Microeconomics; Public economics; Macroeconomics; Ecology; Biology","score_opus":0.03734085680803412,"score_gpt":0.22269483863881814,"score_spread":0.18535398183078403,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2017658601","genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"empirical","domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","genre_candidate":"other","genre_consensus":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated","genre_scores_codex":[0.050521858,0.025266133,0.0007443393,0.18006255,0.05331386,0.0015296314,0.0022221466,0.00018496407,0.68615454],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.51837426,0.013754727,0.0042206277,0.012724145,0.073306724,0.00024276669,0.0012154992,0.0011750235,0.37498623],"study_design_codex":"not_applicable","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9918703,0.00016042695,0.004306297,0.0016328379,0.000139223,0.0018909203],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9904758,0.00014987407,0.005211425,0.0013480929,0.0005867176,0.0022281383],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","scholarly_communication","research_integrity","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["research_integrity","insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.0043867556,0.0011033814,0.0028989555,0.0039929473,0.0004747038,0.0028021396,0.0020381385,0.0012982544,0.002458279],"category_scores_gemma":[0.003017347,0.0013411733,0.0007883948,0.0007173624,0.00041331848,0.0055369516,0.000685299,0.0028158643,0.0018559211],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000031282605,0.00039644586,0.0078051034,0.00014101456,0.0006469504,0.000008805134,0.00013620399,0.000012980258,8.725613e-7,0.17006715,0.81822705,0.0025261394],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012307982,0.00032127637,0.007701945,0.000085334075,0.000039370934,0.00022000767,0.00016787519,0.00023510662,0.0000030506556,0.072251216,0.91650945,0.0012345496],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000716451,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000597392,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.4678524,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0026336538,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0019296332,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999983},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2025351236","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(01)00185-2","title":"Competition and the reform of incentive schemes in the regulated sector","year":2002,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Auction Theory and Applications","field":"Decision Sciences","cited_by":31,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on Organizations; Université de Montréal","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Competition (biology); Public economics; Microeconomics; International economics","score_opus":0.11858054664214326,"score_gpt":0.3081580561817353,"score_spread":0.18957750953959204,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2025351236","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":[0.9772359,0.00013668307,0.00089455326,0.016707025,0.000076765646,0.00006598442,0.000003916621,0.0000012417455,0.004877916],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.999265,0.0001717948,0.0001375335,0.00019527035,0.0000617697,0.0000015705992,2.7562436e-7,0.0000017057479,0.00016504548],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9989974,0.00019309098,0.0005678956,0.00006321024,0.00011864507,0.00005975967],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9983302,0.00058806513,0.00072128844,0.00017300705,0.00016245975,0.000025001496],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0044312794,0.00003845628,0.00014588577,0.00012646554,0.00008007078,0.0001068793,0.00038588818,0.00002755179,0.0002746844],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00032137017,0.000018067925,0.00006048773,0.00023713068,0.00025564828,0.00041413706,0.000029568464,0.0001255151,0.000008439985],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000028168068,0.00005269677,0.0010766487,8.5044286e-7,0.000016474081,2.2222756e-7,0.0012125308,0.000066629545,0.000024187138,0.9882024,0.00052987365,0.008789316],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0028051643,0.000100303674,0.029971942,0.000019067384,0.000019445726,0.0001748604,0.026101884,0.012068287,0.00045021018,0.8063742,0.1217993,0.0001153377],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00000391221,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002203046,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.1818282,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000041802487,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000018446122,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.30076015},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2027828969","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2015.04.001","title":"New parties and policy outcomes: Evidence from Colombian local governments","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policies and Political Economy","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":20,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Swenson College of Science and Engineering, University of Minnesota Duluth; Université du Québec à Montréal; Princeton University","keywords":"Incentive; Regression discontinuity design; Economics; Politics; Revenue; Public economics; Local government; Ideology; Tax revenue; Competition (biology); Public good; Political economy; Political science; Market economy; Public administration; Law; Microeconomics; Finance","score_opus":0.10659915760163358,"score_gpt":0.26951613258007534,"score_spread":0.16291697497844176,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2027828969","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":[0.92857224,0.0028713765,0.0048574447,0.047252852,0.0010239104,0.0001046834,0.00018255983,0.000013790954,0.015121154],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99289745,0.00058319385,0.0016328183,0.0027078462,0.00080496544,0.0000019279955,0.0000023427274,0.000024404735,0.0013450366],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99809325,0.000024673049,0.0011981835,0.00022331203,0.00004444326,0.00041614656],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9976386,0.00022769177,0.0008653316,0.00025242724,0.000054834793,0.0009611514],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00083334785,0.0001852313,0.0006959751,0.00020970724,0.000050007555,0.0003032586,0.00038832607,0.0001338342,0.00022445456],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00087405095,0.00019071587,0.00016674153,0.000088981964,0.00014496368,0.0012379098,0.00015180679,0.00022353945,0.00021508393],"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":[0.000034305005,0.000065408945,0.40216455,0.000009849286,0.00022622332,0.000004048337,0.0007664699,0.00009286251,6.647292e-7,0.5652065,0.023646614,0.007782498],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001969428,0.00040480657,0.17421575,0.000031899566,0.000019742194,0.000033035114,0.00092608755,0.0011349565,0.000017479744,0.40825403,0.4125858,0.0004069936],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.003664047,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00027091548,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.3889392,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00072269083,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00038443826,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.77771676},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2034033745","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.05.013","title":"Individual evolutionary learning, other-regarding preferences, and the voluntary contributions mechanism","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":71,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Stylized fact; Merge (version control); Mechanism (biology); Economics; Variety (cybernetics); Microeconomics; Econometrics; Variation (astronomy); Mathematical economics; Computer science; Artificial intelligence; Epistemology","score_opus":0.05174760641848807,"score_gpt":0.30722176433600407,"score_spread":0.255474157917516,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2034033745","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":[0.9820655,0.0033671595,0.00011487384,0.0057387734,0.0009076659,0.00015827887,0.000030776493,0.000014612317,0.0076023503],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9971707,0.0012346839,0.00044216582,0.00018558718,0.00073581474,0.000008761621,0.0000028238148,0.000008888315,0.00021061553],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99871975,0.0003240662,0.00041312998,0.000086995744,0.000106815285,0.00034922987],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987978,0.0002754838,0.00052445324,0.00007289953,0.00012619534,0.00020321005],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0036053816,0.000100522644,0.00026088115,0.00010022624,0.00084697135,0.00017921523,0.0002915654,0.000085713844,0.00010557518],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003489222,0.00007832622,0.00011347255,0.00005955125,0.00054827385,0.0012228937,0.00014242131,0.00030972908,0.000010405546],"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":[0.000024300267,0.00007357921,0.24157502,0.0000015958359,0.00018565868,3.054198e-7,0.010482228,0.000010145616,0.000017578279,0.7448944,0.0010259018,0.0017093095],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.008585907,0.00041189988,0.076696955,0.000055195876,0.0005000209,0.00018973509,0.15123788,0.00031518287,0.00044235573,0.15648979,0.60408896,0.0009861037],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00052315625,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00035278517,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6030631,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003997267,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00023027587,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6514304},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2039944335","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2014.10.002","title":"Presidential coattails versus the median voter: Senator selection in US elections","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Electoral Systems and Political Participation","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":27,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Presidential system; Economics; Selection (genetic algorithm); Voter model; Econometrics; Political science; Statistics; Law; Politics; Mathematics; Computer science","score_opus":0.0558941974438774,"score_gpt":0.33210041529062545,"score_spread":0.27620621784674804,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2039944335","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":[0.9726244,0.000011803487,0.0003731092,0.022067102,0.0013346031,0.000084460386,8.542801e-7,0.0000079152705,0.0034957035],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99788326,0.00001741037,0.000034460798,0.000104433246,0.0017602462,0.0000037133284,4.2980813e-7,0.0000053909835,0.00019062674],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9987321,0.0004215515,0.00039480004,0.00006828852,0.00011283619,0.00027042587],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990557,0.0003266027,0.00026752445,0.00005067776,0.00014254758,0.00015693832],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0020689748,0.000053733518,0.00013145489,0.000118861,0.00022772842,0.00019721616,0.00016329154,0.00008260812,0.00008906763],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008096817,0.00004306616,0.000069069116,0.00017731148,0.00007907511,0.0004902628,0.00000938602,0.00020257966,0.000015627067],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","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":[0.00010629348,0.00016674357,0.35939816,0.000012003251,0.0001276349,0.0000013655311,0.003159664,0.0010712747,0.0002790884,0.61902237,0.0076196245,0.009035752],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0036725407,0.001022966,0.33950976,0.000041346993,0.000111083515,0.000032389347,0.0017991445,0.008850944,0.0006161962,0.09294387,0.55087554,0.00052423816],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0047240993,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.14993769,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5432559,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003597505,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003570757,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.8655737},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2040725673","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.09.004","title":"Second-order statistical discrimination","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Labor market dynamics and wage inequality","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":20,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Alberta","funders":"","keywords":"Human capital; Economics; Incentive; Distribution (mathematics); Labour economics; Demographic economics; Microeconomics; Mathematics; Economic growth","score_opus":0.05330811965549387,"score_gpt":0.2558739768159862,"score_spread":0.20256585716049236,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2040725673","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":[0.9203526,0.00077339646,0.045740392,0.0017454192,0.0019763254,0.000067993285,0.0002872417,0.000009077596,0.0290476],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99269783,0.00025312844,0.005594394,0.0003664261,0.00060137163,0.0000021525643,0.000018956402,0.000023137834,0.0004426032],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9982324,0.000040982883,0.0011830148,0.00013660289,0.0000315556,0.00037543074],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99815094,0.00014078249,0.0010859746,0.00020572297,0.0001379268,0.0002786779],"candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003250413,0.00012969166,0.00042135993,0.00026803024,0.000061585306,0.000154192,0.00025564063,0.000101647194,0.0019087925],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00057139865,0.00013557448,0.00012051818,0.00012700833,0.000052418083,0.0013796408,0.000055432967,0.00023295524,0.00011085207],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00000718843,0.00014346284,0.10222892,0.000014741559,0.000062016545,0.0000010208619,0.0001635575,0.000010223843,0.0000021235203,0.8943498,0.0005023944,0.0025145204],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010293879,0.00011680028,0.23341158,0.000007573314,0.000017344311,0.00007412242,0.00022442888,0.0016412012,0.00001434222,0.48318362,0.2798753,0.00040429892],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000012060805,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002929992,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.41116622,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002552967,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0000686653,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9990036},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2047003355","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2006.08.001","title":"Inequality and informality","year":2006,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Taxation and Compliance Studies","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":24,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa","funders":"","keywords":"Inequality; Robustness (evolution); Economics; Economic inequality; Informal sector; Econometrics; Psychological intervention; Public economics; Government (linguistics); Econometric model; Labour economics; Economic growth; Mathematics","score_opus":0.06796264098026544,"score_gpt":0.23387409521195643,"score_spread":0.16591145423169099,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2047003355","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":[0.9465943,0.0013625502,0.0027071473,0.002943198,0.00035444286,0.00003540484,0.00002693472,0.0000075617377,0.045968477],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99803185,0.0003359094,0.00083206943,0.0002827096,0.00024349905,0.0000010801958,0.000001679727,0.0000052820274,0.00026589085],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99887264,0.000008775787,0.00087685557,0.00008840251,0.000013557808,0.00013979789],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.998616,0.00003030739,0.0011220165,0.00010592276,0.0000651753,0.00006061613],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009845627,0.000073792544,0.0002947242,0.00015234227,0.00006533282,0.00011715912,0.00012146889,0.000041210267,0.00009054152],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00010615528,0.000078602556,0.000078930396,0.00006532965,0.00005343651,0.00066677976,0.00004451641,0.00010184265,0.000035984627],"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":[0.0000031611557,0.000027006625,0.5210992,0.000006843279,0.000025282496,3.697761e-7,0.000050605617,0.00002697524,4.79819e-7,0.47645584,0.0011015199,0.0012026894],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00045851755,0.000034444398,0.655769,0.000002433083,0.0000022667423,0.000017860417,0.00011231614,0.00016138541,0.0000057877733,0.122737095,0.22059588,0.00010299538],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00006050318,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00005390997,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.35371873,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007334322,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000027300359,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3205319},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2049665839","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2006.03.002","title":"What can be learned about peer effects using college roommates? Evidence from new survey data and students from disadvantaged backgrounds","year":2006,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":348,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"Andrew W. Mellon Foundation","keywords":"Peer effects; Disadvantaged; Variation (astronomy); Empirical evidence; Survey data collection; Psychology; Quality (philosophy); Higher education; Peer review; Peer group; Mathematics education; Social psychology; Economics; Political science","score_opus":0.16474526086052618,"score_gpt":0.3909116260147189,"score_spread":0.22616636515419272,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2049665839","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":[0.9914292,0.002591146,0.00008177667,0.0037457393,0.0017323169,0.000114814524,0.00023881577,0.000009501802,0.000056701567],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9899644,0.005642331,0.0008524737,0.00033592363,0.0023209248,5.704395e-7,0.00010376179,0.000019524537,0.00076005026],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99790806,0.00045835838,0.00057029905,0.0002932932,0.0004239625,0.0003460542],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99681324,0.001575883,0.0006753906,0.00038752376,0.00020839684,0.0003395826],"candidate_categories":["scholarly_communication"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0041875583,0.00016156415,0.00039647578,0.00010705262,0.0003730818,0.0022092967,0.0012925304,0.00013356113,0.00012940267],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0011839322,0.00015685958,0.0000552959,0.00017002474,0.000119655764,0.0076008625,0.00027357956,0.00032220213,0.0000064627397],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00004570351,0.000041309926,0.99131113,0.000004948677,0.00008148992,0.000007307807,0.0018726754,0.000098120334,0.00005326594,0.00002901349,0.0052524037,0.0012026147],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012406451,0.000050857492,0.97652984,0.00021314554,0.00007451651,0.00000450445,0.004951509,0.001096199,0.000041091396,0.0012780073,0.014250897,0.0002687972],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.06343727,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.27422282,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.21078554,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003598593,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00084691,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9988265},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2051552702","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.06.008","title":"Providing global public goods under uncertainty","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Climate Change Policy and Economics","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":35,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université Laval; Université de Montréal","funders":"","keywords":"Public good; Economics; Ex-ante; Welfare; Public economics; Homogeneous; Microeconomics; Risk aversion (psychology); Benchmark (surveying); Multiplier (economics); Global public good; Expected utility hypothesis; Macroeconomics; Financial economics","score_opus":0.14823735556563286,"score_gpt":0.28033370065000396,"score_spread":0.1320963450843711,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2051552702","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":[0.9431843,0.0005425216,0.0014004727,0.018772885,0.0040391646,0.00013971391,0.00032074435,0.00003353912,0.031566624],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9938934,0.0008003564,0.002014734,0.0014907324,0.001552113,0.000006700745,0.000017274586,0.00004292928,0.0001817693],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9970823,0.000023101891,0.0017642758,0.00036924065,0.000034598834,0.0007264691],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99673295,0.000114307826,0.0020233586,0.00048379903,0.000119783275,0.0005258061],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0025847105,0.0002787173,0.00077318883,0.00044791555,0.00018387841,0.0005037225,0.00085330923,0.00030365068,0.0010641934],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005517513,0.00031952705,0.00041336284,0.0002526023,0.00015462506,0.0017455501,0.00017360561,0.0006179896,0.000329584],"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":[0.000014296695,0.00015364525,0.09328115,0.000018855526,0.00017370695,0.0000031050486,0.00012702412,0.00030510552,0.000018718743,0.9004303,0.0020591537,0.0034149229],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0020418544,0.00018661794,0.016148195,0.000011515471,0.00002049129,0.0004315643,0.00057146675,0.0065654386,0.00003272651,0.48074913,0.49248216,0.0007588269],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00011515794,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0010832931,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.490423,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00067978207,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00027689998,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999257},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2053821251","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2005.07.007","title":"Tax competition with heterogeneous firms","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":26,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McMaster University; University of Waterloo","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Economics; Competition (biology); Tax competition; Microeconomics; Industrial organization; International economics; Public economics; Ad valorem tax; Tax reform","score_opus":0.021379107336589376,"score_gpt":0.24556857065132426,"score_spread":0.22418946331473488,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2053821251","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":[0.97590435,0.000082343824,0.004649584,0.007462246,0.00020275735,0.000051062136,0.0000034113414,0.000007802509,0.01163642],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9969691,0.00075837004,0.00077486015,0.00048693694,0.000582829,5.1789766e-7,0.0000012978331,0.000004826202,0.00042123173],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99942195,0.000037175076,0.00021937375,0.00005333128,0.00012106627,0.00014712567],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994191,0.0000215391,0.00031737238,0.00005103596,0.00009134243,0.00009963299],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00042468694,0.000044486787,0.00009852472,0.00004022975,0.000107581865,0.00012008843,0.00012813463,0.000039957242,0.00023257943],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000034397635,0.00003747338,0.000043262076,0.00006058375,0.00005913239,0.00071436726,0.000007748076,0.000058354755,0.000018953466],"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":[0.000121322206,0.00053503533,0.13406207,0.000012029003,0.0001627476,0.000022517954,0.0046299156,0.022835925,0.000032131597,0.6592303,0.007298583,0.17105745],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0005263154,0.00012863515,0.0028618074,0.000011425212,0.0000102748445,0.000027783148,0.00056764093,0.0004798573,0.000121662124,0.0012999331,0.9938681,0.0000965667],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000028286742,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0014043214,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.9865695,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002613458,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00017719415,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.25465816},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2061456865","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.06.014","title":"VCM or PPM? A comparison of the performance of two voluntary public goods mechanisms","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":111,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Victoria","funders":"National Science Foundation","keywords":"Public good; Efficiency; Economics; Turnover; Value (mathematics); Econometrics; Relative value; Point (geometry); Public economics; Microeconomics; Environmental economics; Statistics; Mathematics; Macroeconomics","score_opus":0.09093004096530903,"score_gpt":0.35394075409142034,"score_spread":0.2630107131261113,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2061456865","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":[0.9904604,0.00023440219,0.00005410856,0.0040535848,0.0009705227,0.00015499377,0.000012763743,0.000007036779,0.0040521696],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99666065,0.00030127,0.0026188183,0.00012051726,0.00015962079,0.0000035226042,7.3699823e-7,0.000014368178,0.00012050041],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.998216,0.00009571844,0.0010572051,0.00013047994,0.00017907933,0.00032154325],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9977092,0.00007806683,0.001618947,0.0002313664,0.00021031189,0.0001520818],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0014022661,0.00013784559,0.00053411245,0.00016121367,0.0002908266,0.00008289307,0.0009162017,0.00008529986,0.00012396245],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00011987647,0.00010436795,0.0002407384,0.00021233305,0.00047594323,0.001041404,0.0002060835,0.00024462934,0.000004786814],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.000102065394,0.0011567594,0.51485527,0.00004454353,0.00036095618,0.0000018394289,0.018402569,0.0013871004,0.002926599,0.4543214,0.0006176734,0.0058231866],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.026712997,0.009883677,0.14993891,0.00087738497,0.00087227847,0.00027417307,0.30855265,0.00325521,0.27866998,0.15087228,0.066514805,0.0035756696],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00064714573,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0053397557,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.36491638,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0007258513,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0011198742,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.42560014},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2062394221","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(01)00088-3","title":"Exogenous targeting instruments as a solution to group moral hazards","year":2002,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":94,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Lakehead University","funders":"McMaster University","keywords":"Moral hazard; Economics; Actuarial science; Microeconomics; Incentive","score_opus":0.07793790039166727,"score_gpt":0.3059436968522863,"score_spread":0.22800579646061903,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2062394221","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":[0.9655149,0.00032060864,0.000034654673,0.006165974,0.0012135314,0.00014405668,0.000005431532,0.000018169843,0.026582688],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9950079,0.00059513707,0.0028134745,0.0005218373,0.0005827574,0.0000062980785,0.0000011997391,0.000016934453,0.0004544652],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99855256,0.00009046086,0.0006201032,0.0001611787,0.00013136042,0.00044432512],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989034,0.000029372815,0.0004851566,0.00010425246,0.0001225278,0.00035532244],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0011869431,0.00012770008,0.00028987514,0.00020648103,0.00049317535,0.00027458154,0.00039832236,0.00008593571,0.00045764222],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00018993643,0.00014100444,0.00015152512,0.00012016014,0.00012668218,0.0011210733,0.00012528594,0.00016784236,0.00019063422],"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":[0.00012133622,0.0020791702,0.35483003,0.000022000468,0.00067644566,0.000063865395,0.09771551,0.00029041973,0.004939067,0.18767937,0.052028753,0.29955402],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0055234046,0.0033513177,0.012592274,0.000105234285,0.00017354898,0.00022218535,0.092128135,0.002014516,0.0023210126,0.022880448,0.856274,0.0024139301],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0006525,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00086123636,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.80424523,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0012616626,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00012730874,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5749994},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2064523287","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2011.09.001","title":"Disability policy and the labor market: Evidence from a natural experiment in Canada, 1998–2006","year":2011,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Retirement, Disability, and Employment","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":69,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Human Resources and Skills Development Canada; U.S. Social Security Administration","keywords":"Disability insurance; Earnings; Disability benefits; Natural experiment; Economics; Demographic economics; Work (physics); Medical model of disability; Difference in differences; Rest (music); Exploit; Propensity score matching; Labour economics; Social security; Medicine; Econometrics; Finance","score_opus":0.16328152139243335,"score_gpt":0.3596938675309933,"score_spread":0.19641234613855996,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2064523287","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":[0.98124105,0.0011443736,0.0000013800806,0.013899811,0.0004950491,0.00017018066,0.00001111629,0.0000024210508,0.0030346434],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9978044,0.0011655429,0.000105717736,0.00046549403,0.00036326353,0.0000068055597,2.9096236e-7,0.000004753661,0.00008374118],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99844515,0.00043129662,0.00053210906,0.0001432284,0.00017385812,0.00027435686],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987562,0.0005072952,0.00031594123,0.00018392122,0.000056462326,0.0001802149],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0023759436,0.000093020746,0.00024370363,0.00003646268,0.0001373169,0.00011060226,0.00040851018,0.00003692664,0.00020677064],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0009820597,0.00006516886,0.00006988182,0.00009981547,0.00055097626,0.00054950913,0.0000750816,0.00016544737,0.0000010150784],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001261652,0.00007746106,0.9706081,0.000005476277,0.000038288435,0.0000013743105,0.016870037,0.0000024272485,0.0000031377542,0.007489718,0.00080277515,0.0039750542],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0008485318,0.000030411857,0.96108735,0.000029998037,0.00001216087,0.0000015104879,0.019229742,0.00013552251,0.000028524282,0.010147149,0.008322499,0.00012662093],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.9588496,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.9826289,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.02377928,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0031038576,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0027266708,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.811648},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2065638270","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2005.04.002","title":"Auditing and competitive bidding in the public sector","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Public Procurement and Policy","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":5,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Waterloo; York University","funders":"","keywords":"Bidding; Audit; Economics; Public sector; Microeconomics; Industrial organization; Business; Accounting; Economy","score_opus":0.04434261607255895,"score_gpt":0.23240825790056746,"score_spread":0.1880656418280085,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2065638270","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":[0.8805881,0.00020566564,0.00007656078,0.06831037,0.00028496113,0.000089089226,0.0000016778499,0.000012933247,0.050430626],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9891964,0.00008265485,0.00021553425,0.005749209,0.0046893405,0.0000027396986,0.0000034053003,0.000012631281,0.000048053033],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99896705,0.000023947357,0.00048756308,0.000108361106,0.00010615202,0.00030694553],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989373,0.000112873415,0.00067542336,0.000103174556,0.00014533871,0.00002589264],"candidate_categories":["scholarly_communication"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0023760127,0.00012003144,0.0002042005,0.0006278109,0.0001212034,0.0012287013,0.0004133633,0.00004901,0.0001787344],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00038120698,0.00009104936,0.00007093683,0.00028175735,0.000050310813,0.0043484443,0.000109141634,0.0002676157,0.000030316085],"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":[0.0000073909023,0.000090659974,0.07493668,0.000029846446,0.000048525522,0.000005190053,0.00023057744,0.000019638916,0.000017723929,0.8859951,0.006912399,0.03170627],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00084187766,0.000012849119,0.025770476,0.00002197545,0.00001428679,0.00005431606,0.001131065,0.0022436765,0.0000035820492,0.0059421826,0.9638082,0.00015553719],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000020458758,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004142906,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.95689577,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00009677364,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008490237,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99980813},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2077125535","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2005.07.005","title":"State fiscal institutions and empty-nest migration: Are Tiebout voters hobbled?","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":57,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Victoria","funders":"University of Michigan; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development","keywords":"Tiebout model; Economics; Discretion; State (computer science); Sorting; Monetary economics; Macroeconomics; Public good; Microeconomics; Political science","score_opus":0.07235247446474803,"score_gpt":0.29844155557655877,"score_spread":0.22608908111181075,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2077125535","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":[0.92846066,0.00061264925,0.0005842306,0.058182605,0.0005661806,0.000073375566,0.000014014719,0.000016003049,0.01149028],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9941427,0.0021624712,0.0005364516,0.000567862,0.00090742874,0.0000018866666,0.0000015220767,0.000005406045,0.001674242],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9991149,0.00007512325,0.00040565376,0.00009951924,0.00010779803,0.0001970387],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990088,0.000110409244,0.00041907237,0.00007114899,0.00019488837,0.00019568935],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007109757,0.00008505631,0.0001987391,0.0001480507,0.0005276857,0.00029403585,0.0001491959,0.00005799616,0.00006405855],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00022526582,0.00007838845,0.00007487212,0.000100384525,0.00025665457,0.0012321712,0.00002667426,0.00014060641,0.000014114642],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","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":[0.000038004913,0.00026567464,0.74210995,0.000018638564,0.00030905812,0.000011163728,0.044920556,0.0013243386,0.000007750849,0.10988807,0.04686544,0.054241333],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006551418,0.00005297023,0.052994087,0.000015464566,0.00002786155,0.000020946634,0.009121692,0.00038256982,0.000008384927,0.001998512,0.934546,0.00017639376],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013587823,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.022047253,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.88768053,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00020000474,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00038301508,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9957978},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2078397099","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(00)00135-3","title":"Population ethics and the existence of value functions","year":2001,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Income, Poverty, and Inequality","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":36,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université de Montréal; University of British Columbia","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Axiom; Mathematical economics; Representation (politics); Population; Rank (graph theory); Value (mathematics); Mathematics; Economics; Pareto principle; Social choice theory; Order (exchange); Representation theorem; Statistics; Combinatorics; Sociology; Discrete mathematics; Law; Political science; Demography","score_opus":0.12459621795587694,"score_gpt":0.3449152057853072,"score_spread":0.22031898782943027,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2078397099","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":[0.9513358,0.00015863079,0.0007580381,0.0209032,0.0007282403,0.000052711177,0.0000028054037,0.0000035982855,0.026056988],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9969383,0.0015280202,0.00021962504,0.00046164024,0.0004102526,4.169219e-7,6.169281e-7,0.0000027383603,0.0004384101],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988952,0.00044003423,0.00039722488,0.00004893579,0.0001122161,0.000106335494],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99856013,0.0005633392,0.00050616055,0.00008265991,0.00022198781,0.00006570845],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0073950556,0.00003934072,0.00015552563,0.0000575757,0.00035783058,0.00008202571,0.00015867718,0.00008235438,0.000047241097],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0016966783,0.000028108014,0.00007690365,0.00008712375,0.00026915295,0.00052706973,0.00002007962,0.00027441984,0.0000014690759],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000028934941,0.000028892251,0.08619979,0.0000051935017,0.000025681657,2.6336465e-7,0.006356997,0.00007759848,0.0000012747229,0.9036449,0.00026144244,0.0033689986],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002422206,0.00016924487,0.3249884,0.000037300335,0.000085383734,0.000056157052,0.03221494,0.001892302,0.000006342295,0.33958778,0.29830182,0.00023812572],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0014861388,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.002027114,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5640572,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00009496455,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00023892005,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.27521798},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2078881662","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(00)00122-5","title":"Mortality decline and long-run economic growth","year":2001,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Global Health Care Issues","field":"Health Professions","cited_by":196,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"National Institute on Aging","keywords":"Economics; Longevity; Human capital; Social security; Fertility; Overlapping generations model; Investment (military); Welfare; Growth model; Capital accumulation; Labour economics; Macroeconomics; Population; Economic growth; Biology; Market economy; Demography","score_opus":0.10965088462858276,"score_gpt":0.4344804778732137,"score_spread":0.32482959324463095,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2078881662","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":[0.9761788,0.00071012013,0.00013327804,0.012973817,0.0021460603,0.00020797655,0.000027589002,0.000022575936,0.0075997496],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9896491,0.00512033,0.0005214003,0.0026991044,0.0016009994,0.000004423457,0.0000056371873,0.000026026053,0.0003729856],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9973977,0.0002713775,0.001497185,0.00019489958,0.00008501909,0.00055378623],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99719226,0.00040456693,0.0012491104,0.0002488225,0.00032146633,0.00058374077],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0030407435,0.00016418187,0.00053286256,0.00020801528,0.00027496764,0.000048198453,0.00032611727,0.00021929246,0.0005963517],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00037786443,0.00015387706,0.00010785272,0.000066861,0.00008045592,0.00074493355,0.0001881844,0.00061992527,0.00026205854],"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":[0.000036567115,0.00003610937,0.9768453,0.00006016941,0.00006205534,0.000019195018,0.00019603378,0.000012920125,9.691927e-7,0.010683976,0.01084473,0.0012019504],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0014449584,0.00015951594,0.8395151,0.000057268204,0.000034855584,0.00017175957,0.00075192266,0.0002852064,0.000003321288,0.010635058,0.146762,0.00017904831],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00034246754,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003753543,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.13733025,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0007904754,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0009987443,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6529633},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2091200558","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2006.04.005","title":"Are stocks desirable in tax-deferred accounts?","year":2006,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":12,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Deferred tax; Economics; Taxable income; Tax basis; Portfolio; Monetary economics; Volatility (finance); Bond; Tax rate; Tax reform; Microeconomics; Financial economics; Business; State income tax; Finance; Public economics; Accounting; Gross income","score_opus":0.03327750321208824,"score_gpt":0.2147695522929561,"score_spread":0.18149204908086786,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2091200558","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":[0.9929748,0.00016248452,0.00006542789,0.00070362876,0.00044920805,0.00009376021,0.0000034527775,0.000015042888,0.0055321828],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9961988,0.000024153826,0.00031861567,0.0009040202,0.0018139104,0.0000026865648,0.0000150828855,0.000028185623,0.000694544],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99828005,0.000015924363,0.0009950928,0.00019063297,0.00016427708,0.00035403238],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9972659,0.00003906975,0.00206757,0.00021323991,0.0003937405,0.00002050396],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0012690685,0.00018439992,0.0004615857,0.0010199933,0.00009945533,0.00068042125,0.00042116214,0.00009870019,0.0003835461],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00021581055,0.00018037467,0.00021146904,0.00051065895,0.00003498209,0.0036640242,0.00010419245,0.00023308955,0.00012530478],"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":[0.000023279248,0.00012366954,0.98186594,0.000025630343,0.00001204613,0.000020929856,0.0000063424654,0.0010824314,0.000028116496,0.0073941187,0.008876656,0.00054082484],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012021651,0.000011462553,0.80271137,0.00007371909,0.00006268563,0.000009551121,0.00015815748,0.0050548827,0.000017296816,0.012185149,0.17820445,0.00030914915],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0006216872,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003310552,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.17915462,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00022115337,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00007426616,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7355465},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2116161255","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2008.07.002","title":"Crime, punishment, and prejudice","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Law, Economics, and Judicial Systems","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":25,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Commit; Prejudice (legal term); Punishment (psychology); Population; Ex-ante; Criminology; Economics; Schedule; Psychology; Actuarial science; Social psychology; Sociology; Computer science; Demography","score_opus":0.06435809056592644,"score_gpt":0.219202532371983,"score_spread":0.15484444180605655,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2116161255","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":[0.82271516,0.003779949,0.00078279345,0.0016034497,0.0018839297,0.00014829419,0.000059103553,0.000018925513,0.1690084],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9914827,0.0057611573,0.000652082,0.0005687463,0.0009271115,0.0000036072424,0.0000031054055,0.000034628145,0.00056687935],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9976113,0.000027184424,0.0016746727,0.00029054735,0.000026249538,0.0003700894],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99740213,0.00008321494,0.0018134208,0.0002799963,0.00009127638,0.00032995234],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015381433,0.00016143601,0.0007994005,0.00039811808,0.00018771282,0.00017191914,0.00038015106,0.00015204401,0.00027737842],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00019234765,0.00022159908,0.00021074992,0.000097456126,0.00024531232,0.0012430319,0.00008865481,0.00023547471,0.00016095782],"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":[0.00001927201,0.0001264213,0.21094844,0.000022767574,0.0002464875,0.000015497502,0.0005171996,0.000032610715,0.0000053766817,0.7788001,0.00824484,0.001021003],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0031559158,0.00045826493,0.13759124,0.000028922721,0.000025401854,0.0013750595,0.00040623083,0.0010547483,0.00008243224,0.2829208,0.57209545,0.00080549245],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001204655,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002266539,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.56385064,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00024907666,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00012520491,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9036548},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2122538209","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2016.08.011","title":"Homophily, group size, and the diffusion of political information in social networks: Evidence from Twitter","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Media Influence and Politics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":407,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Homophily; Politics; Social media; Group (periodic table); Diffusion; Social network (sociolinguistics); Sociology; Social psychology; Political science; Psychology; Computer science; World Wide Web; Law","score_opus":0.03949292155602875,"score_gpt":0.2896411079203866,"score_spread":0.25014818636435787,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2122538209","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":[0.96850157,0.00008013956,0.00033009337,0.030043699,0.0003023976,0.00006176715,0.0000043983705,0.0000018234631,0.00067409856],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9967563,0.0010918102,0.000089970374,0.0010521126,0.0009922514,0.0000013277136,2.881685e-7,0.000002268629,0.000013678566],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988882,0.00020489324,0.00052449346,0.000041519655,0.00011443847,0.00022644225],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.997417,0.0018968415,0.0004051459,0.00006171264,0.00010354722,0.000115778705],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0019660722,0.000051944273,0.0001902655,0.00006912973,0.000095638046,0.00008945454,0.00022199427,0.00009163508,0.00006118949],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0017236307,0.00003012865,0.00006076581,0.00005964041,0.00050369,0.0015137956,0.00004363701,0.00011971971,0.000002903966],"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":[0.00010821982,0.000034314602,0.19993939,0.0000083001505,0.000030465295,0.0000011040293,0.017101489,0.000006536648,0.000021845593,0.76877296,0.0009109595,0.013064417],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0054895896,0.00015171134,0.6750326,0.00032918196,0.000057471276,0.000009944693,0.01611406,0.00061426306,0.000023133962,0.2670938,0.034795012,0.00028924723],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0009178344,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004207819,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5016792,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00012416288,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00021752567,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.20634714},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2124027116","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2003.09.007","title":"Tiebout and redistribution in a model of residential and political choice","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":36,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Tiebout model; Economics; Redistribution (election); Politics; Public economics; Neoclassical economics; Microeconomics; Public good; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.04829213550473223,"score_gpt":0.23817041370344286,"score_spread":0.18987827819871061,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2124027116","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":[0.9829245,0.00038142642,0.001587592,0.0044565094,0.00013666022,0.000052402243,0.000080968675,0.0000026840528,0.0103772655],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9989464,0.00009910996,0.0005908352,0.00016491304,0.00017226134,0.0000010701212,0.000002547079,0.000010096845,0.0000127613575],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.998498,0.000009905877,0.0010439055,0.00016181452,0.0000143092175,0.00027205163],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.999024,0.000051986444,0.0006025566,0.00010894292,0.000028777971,0.0001837354],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00084849907,0.00009892998,0.00043803934,0.00036479384,0.000030575873,0.00006707037,0.00013154508,0.000119174576,0.000006742147],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00030979112,0.00011765858,0.000073473224,0.000059372236,0.00012649952,0.00067326304,0.000060977,0.00019045321,0.0000032122452],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000016017433,0.000047197165,0.041892003,0.000020645619,0.00002350456,8.1044476e-7,0.00010767762,0.00028269828,0.000012984173,0.9574259,0.000043859312,0.00012669878],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0016179207,0.00009003831,0.040906236,0.000015917212,0.0000052904493,0.000040927218,0.00007227544,0.008211483,0.000083207495,0.9486092,0.00022877222,0.00011877708],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013607205,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00009322373,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.016021913,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00025094158,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000096796364,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.47979778},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2127737696","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.07.011","title":"Incentive equivalence with fixed migration costs","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":6,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Equivalence (formal languages); Population; Decentralization; Microeconomics; Convexity; Economies of scale; Public economics; Market economy; Mathematics; Financial economics","score_opus":0.034879159532682356,"score_gpt":0.2172003493399108,"score_spread":0.18232118980722845,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2127737696","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":[0.9504704,0.000115474475,0.0012850148,0.0038312813,0.0010580457,0.000091361304,0.000058366026,0.000011550068,0.04307853],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9966442,0.00008403107,0.0019486201,0.00046271886,0.0006378775,0.0000038817743,0.000005752193,0.000025185582,0.00018773937],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99838144,0.00001467407,0.0010064532,0.00023548775,0.000024028603,0.00033789445],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99784815,0.000086006716,0.0014597437,0.00027176779,0.00009879494,0.00023552142],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009785303,0.00016653784,0.00046178905,0.0003710142,0.00009144091,0.00022109436,0.00044530496,0.00014030696,0.00022129893],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00022701258,0.00016644977,0.00015264231,0.00012716702,0.00013592065,0.0014806172,0.00005130104,0.00047632016,0.00017946257],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000053100364,0.00013635808,0.35485917,0.000013613277,0.00014367564,0.000004608393,0.0002582208,0.00003404681,0.000104397186,0.6396417,0.0021982803,0.0025528315],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.004918724,0.0010616032,0.34132463,0.00005382565,0.000040293802,0.00043566345,0.0006132226,0.0064642327,0.0012349008,0.38841328,0.25412974,0.0013099101],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000045526802,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00040823172,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.25193146,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00022108344,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000112126654,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6787625},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2135460520","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2009.09.007","title":"Commodity taxation and parallel imports","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":7,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"","keywords":"Commodity; Economics; Imperfect competition; Welfare; Microeconomics; Aggregate (composite); Normative; Monetary economics; International economics; Market economy","score_opus":0.052200161064163135,"score_gpt":0.22553694125016724,"score_spread":0.1733367801860041,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2135460520","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":[0.9422262,0.0009157162,0.0017257241,0.01008911,0.0004789158,0.000076986944,0.00004284094,0.000011659387,0.044432886],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99650246,0.00031106235,0.0013089183,0.001338519,0.00045250938,8.618647e-7,0.000005438283,0.000010707417,0.00006951375],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99844563,0.000014549772,0.001093085,0.00017739141,0.000013958203,0.0002553594],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9975249,0.00004295539,0.0020083438,0.00018224113,0.000028833028,0.0002126972],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0012600219,0.0001307492,0.00046882793,0.0002933298,0.000080991675,0.00016721801,0.00021643686,0.00011362432,0.00006301149],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002011816,0.0001475928,0.00013854034,0.00007017073,0.00005390799,0.0010364894,0.000029917735,0.00020974048,0.000039579932],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000017975435,0.00009862935,0.09176382,0.0000073208516,0.00005582729,0.000003144564,0.0001925241,0.000057604993,0.0000032450064,0.89580953,0.004006663,0.0079837395],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0007594296,0.00017274093,0.21806546,0.0000044515914,0.0000048965367,0.00012776395,0.000039520524,0.0017664124,0.0000066772263,0.7342169,0.04465142,0.00018431249],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000011303393,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000094698125,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.16159259,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00014093163,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00003979137,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.60186595},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2142067364","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2015.12.002","title":"How to make the metropolitan area work? Neither big government, nor laissez-faire","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":28,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université Laval","funders":"","keywords":"Metropolitan area; Jurisdiction; Productivity; Economics; Competition (biology); Welfare; Work (physics); Distribution (mathematics); Tax competition; Economies of agglomeration; Local government; Government (linguistics); Public economics; Business; Economic geography; Market economy; Tax reform; Ad valorem tax; Economic growth; Public administration","score_opus":0.07833383085499372,"score_gpt":0.2698815774672144,"score_spread":0.19154774661222068,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2142067364","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":[0.7594405,0.00031125703,0.006562185,0.15721188,0.0022833548,0.00024296321,0.000021842963,0.000017782757,0.07390827],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9889812,0.00023693459,0.00028504082,0.0017477324,0.0010587176,0.0000026107627,6.279624e-7,0.000012994875,0.007674144],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99874127,0.000106106825,0.00029947172,0.00010896683,0.00042488694,0.00031930176],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99878556,0.00007247131,0.00045119837,0.00016562505,0.0001632989,0.0003618558],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001539123,0.000096708995,0.00018183148,0.00003985927,0.00016635211,0.00059866725,0.00047184608,0.00007144953,0.000042437947],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000770957,0.00006852345,0.00010456619,0.000266139,0.00009470375,0.0005321438,0.000055606622,0.000123195,0.000018115137],"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":[0.00011772687,0.00022123323,0.3238357,0.0000044420963,0.00017490098,0.000010696657,0.0064306227,0.0002605758,0.000010148714,0.41706055,0.15762655,0.09424685],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0003558412,0.00008477713,0.006265458,0.000009343096,0.000015933902,0.0000031815598,0.022787241,0.000027747988,0.000028652299,0.002732258,0.96758074,0.00010880204],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001225307,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0023797217,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8099542,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0018671062,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00037538246,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5772962},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2144723445","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2006.10.006","title":"Can private giving promote economic segregation?","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":4,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Western University; University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Public economics; Pareto principle; Politics; Constitution; Microeconomics; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.03891036012441309,"score_gpt":0.23085079264459293,"score_spread":0.19194043252017984,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2144723445","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":[0.9300125,0.00030492473,0.0021728985,0.0060444144,0.0017321514,0.00014754587,0.00010011507,0.000025797826,0.05945962],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9952277,0.00008920395,0.002416347,0.0006155841,0.0011753285,0.000002255132,0.000007047051,0.000053905576,0.00041262538],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9966009,0.000019176847,0.002331257,0.00034771356,0.000026218993,0.0006746813],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9966301,0.00012461559,0.0023912394,0.00038243693,0.00005165235,0.00041998195],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0043554846,0.00025763246,0.00074697816,0.00081901415,0.00014703,0.00027114272,0.0006576121,0.00020039208,0.00030415328],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00024126451,0.00030540983,0.00035116952,0.0001241877,0.00010860267,0.0012536456,0.000106303836,0.00039532932,0.00035529013],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000021205286,0.00007166978,0.09649599,0.000022192591,0.00018369676,0.0000071235154,0.00034546098,0.00013911568,0.000013414991,0.8975007,0.0010454305,0.0041540302],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0013747835,0.00017992458,0.05907881,0.00001740824,0.000011136615,0.00018527181,0.00013619635,0.0020097517,0.00035660525,0.7662377,0.16989072,0.00052175333],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000050004062,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00017277812,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.16884528,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0010234257,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00015517164,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999398},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2148021125","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2009.12.004","title":"Social preferences and voting: An exploration using a novel preference revealing mechanism","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":73,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Victoria","funders":"National Science Foundation","keywords":"Voting; Referendum; Public good; Economics; Social preferences; Preference; Public economics; Microeconomics; Mechanism (biology); Social choice theory; Political science","score_opus":0.33988574658920745,"score_gpt":0.38497046166357396,"score_spread":0.04508471507436651,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2148021125","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":[0.99586576,0.000025815372,0.0008893811,0.0010972705,0.0006351702,0.00009873087,0.0000049172236,0.00001317226,0.0013697519],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9881016,0.000097755896,0.011021381,0.00005146032,0.00069145707,0.0000027250896,0.0000011888438,0.000011360012,0.000021092965],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99897313,0.000068013454,0.0004739146,0.00016035132,0.000089684814,0.00023488284],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99886,0.000048037655,0.0006665056,0.000065127024,0.00018942177,0.00017087987],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015941703,0.00010869395,0.00024273654,0.00012874232,0.000631164,0.000424665,0.00026748766,0.00012496873,0.00003116486],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00013822714,0.000113828064,0.00005464619,0.000059745096,0.000204695,0.0034250089,0.00007606841,0.000273469,0.0000010854541],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000016607119,0.00017712502,0.014976965,0.00000682143,0.000049491067,6.742545e-7,0.02747636,0.000020985828,0.0266965,0.92409,0.000017490358,0.006470944],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0067192204,0.0018000286,0.016992435,0.00016324468,0.00044522842,0.00019466448,0.37431735,0.0123447785,0.018959122,0.5440296,0.02045892,0.0035754156],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003047289,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0041685705,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.38006043,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001561866,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00032797488,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.4854467},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2150630895","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.03.005","title":"Tax evasion and social interactions","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Taxation and Compliance Studies","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":366,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université Laval","funders":"","keywords":"Conformity; Economics; Tax evasion; Econometrics; Tobit model; Identification (biology); Evasion (ethics); Microeconomics; Instrumental variable; Welfare economics; Mathematical economics; Public economics; Psychology; Social psychology","score_opus":0.09351688171091498,"score_gpt":0.2721516132344217,"score_spread":0.17863473152350673,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2150630895","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":[0.94887984,0.0007990198,0.011190895,0.008824345,0.0011608701,0.00004255705,0.00001980441,0.000008193048,0.0290745],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99737257,0.0003293215,0.00082124944,0.00036509198,0.00045375802,6.1433667e-7,9.870726e-7,0.000007768653,0.0006486265],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99910253,0.0000055221394,0.00063765014,0.00009544128,0.000012798351,0.00014606772],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988687,0.000045936205,0.00089832844,0.000059081427,0.00006567995,0.00006228694],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00093893846,0.0000668431,0.00023318379,0.00026882725,0.00013061038,0.00008998609,0.00010244975,0.000036912996,0.00015224636],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000085237734,0.000074179705,0.00009031263,0.0000634738,0.00004442028,0.0004942359,0.000037637943,0.00014253672,0.000045745106],"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":[0.000034303794,0.00013707108,0.21219392,0.000017813261,0.00020230994,0.000003727869,0.0015048089,0.000014091205,0.000021742064,0.744952,0.009646027,0.031272173],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0005838733,0.000055641918,0.24960744,0.000004897573,0.000004685517,0.000055787434,0.0010826578,0.00012257893,0.000019548113,0.030080762,0.71824896,0.00013315916],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000008426558,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00009242787,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7148712,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00012505733,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001860838,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.30249608},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2164307923","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2011.11.006","title":"Reality versus propaganda in the formation of beliefs about privatization","year":2011,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Media Influence and Politics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":53,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canadian Institute for Advanced Research","funders":"","keywords":"Government (linguistics); Priming (agriculture); Economics; Public opinion; Water industry; Scale (ratio); Business; Market economy; Public economics; Water supply; Political science; Politics; Law","score_opus":0.20382187942963437,"score_gpt":0.3362856467028062,"score_spread":0.13246376727317183,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2164307923","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":[0.9523141,0.00003610436,0.00018670068,0.0017735922,0.0003859359,0.000094497846,0.0000027252438,0.0000020186362,0.045204353],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9989159,0.00044778708,0.00025909013,0.00009519268,0.00026191483,0.0000012619229,0.0000014203288,0.0000020044297,0.000015443677],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99915785,0.00015099168,0.00043786224,0.00003007121,0.00010214607,0.00012110865],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990397,0.00011984633,0.0005482448,0.00008109041,0.00016224844,0.000048865197],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002500408,0.00003428035,0.00009777254,0.00008777387,0.00006159515,0.000034793215,0.0002621141,0.00005101531,0.000035665777],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005573214,0.000025338479,0.000037995767,0.00010661994,0.000095845215,0.00087590737,0.000009012467,0.00009657141,0.00000243358],"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":[0.00005961647,0.00013556522,0.023941692,0.000031623116,0.000020816964,0.0000027024016,0.14728194,0.000053022595,0.00001024361,0.81529623,0.0007375057,0.012429026],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.006567949,0.0012530705,0.17487882,0.00019077555,0.00009454123,0.00004621475,0.09579813,0.0008083574,0.0029539804,0.14194386,0.5749065,0.00055779575],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00032622062,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0010207797,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.67335236,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00010060496,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00035745307,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.10332732},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2235793931","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2014.04.014","title":"The pitfalls of work requirements in welfare-to-work policies: Experimental evidence on human capital accumulation in the Self-Sufficiency Project","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Labor market dynamics and wage inequality","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":19,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Earnings; Welfare; Human capital; Economics; Work (physics); Labour economics; Population; Baseline (sea); Demographic economics; Finance; Economic growth; Political science; Medicine; Engineering","score_opus":0.14314977540279242,"score_gpt":0.34431568302004195,"score_spread":0.20116590761724953,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2235793931","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":[0.99229085,0.0002749701,0.00008346274,0.004122025,0.00039589423,0.00032198904,0.000009624487,0.000004334902,0.0024968698],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99917716,0.00015273284,0.00016772481,0.00030845683,0.00014426415,0.000013995361,0.0000016923963,0.00001567511,0.000018312468],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9974862,0.00018191713,0.0016649594,0.00023256785,0.000088725596,0.00034563025],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9976912,0.00040672233,0.0013379062,0.00043212567,0.00006974496,0.00006227916],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.007827568,0.00015605307,0.00040966005,0.00046630154,0.00014921145,0.00026302438,0.000910594,0.00008460825,0.000015817046],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006840768,0.00012180855,0.0001402007,0.00057529873,0.000057809477,0.00053429056,0.00009473618,0.00027784373,0.00000724838],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.00006426757,0.0004441921,0.2959056,0.000010477722,0.00002925251,0.0000010645771,0.0034096113,0.0006931892,0.000009236058,0.69854254,0.00005735573,0.00083321723],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012399642,0.00085141795,0.9562948,0.00013795328,0.0000060765037,0.000004364402,0.0021994547,0.0009540206,0.000025369734,0.03003819,0.007890921,0.00035752353],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00027163926,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00022361246,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.66850436,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00053694815,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000072260664,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.49672085},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2238726351","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2013.10.005","title":"Do Grants to Charities Crowd Out Other Income? Evidence from the UK","year":2013,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Nonprofit Sector and Volunteering","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":13,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council; Barrow Cadbury Trust; National Science Foundation","keywords":"Download; Lottery; Developing country; Crowding out; Demographic economics; Business; Political science; Economics; Labour economics; Public economics; Economic growth; Monetary economics","score_opus":0.10316571391554855,"score_gpt":0.32117333657645986,"score_spread":0.2180076226609113,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2238726351","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":[0.982854,0.00043907348,0.00025175908,0.01232032,0.0012888634,0.00012478237,0.0000068271697,0.000008893476,0.002705451],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9961827,0.0002874549,0.00038779614,0.00095503003,0.0015752182,0.0000052317387,1.0279892e-7,0.0000106277985,0.0005958716],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99902,0.000109208915,0.00036233795,0.000102661266,0.0001398733,0.00026596335],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987829,0.00041440412,0.00025171507,0.00016392839,0.00018378087,0.00020331368],"candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015840753,0.00008328085,0.00018385836,0.00007407251,0.000250978,0.0007464991,0.00073082803,0.000062888896,0.0017781812],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00062539213,0.00006028129,0.00010194951,0.000077387274,0.00010609386,0.0011204401,0.00006875718,0.00018543981,0.00016957398],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000007218118,0.000014607119,0.9588181,0.0000030065285,0.00006001999,9.466997e-7,0.022481646,0.00001515291,0.00015308795,0.0054777674,0.006327988,0.006640502],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004347611,0.00011468392,0.82175016,0.00024812965,0.00002574435,0.0000058908495,0.024702193,0.000073981675,0.00022021438,0.020150827,0.131891,0.00038239296],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.009754742,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.012459321,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.13706788,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001847989,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00022905732,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9991343},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2273470132","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2016.10.002","title":"Compulsory voting, turnout, and government spending: Evidence from Austria","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Electoral Systems and Political Participation","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":78,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation; National Science Foundation","keywords":"Turnout; Voting; Demographic economics; Government (linguistics); Economics; Politics; Political science; Public economics; Political economy; Law","score_opus":0.12650948838892778,"score_gpt":0.336107705703497,"score_spread":0.20959821731456924,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2273470132","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":[0.9858775,0.00018435036,0.0006438991,0.011877887,0.0004990146,0.000047048845,0.000006187461,0.000004800262,0.0008592694],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99823517,0.00014132167,0.00015169114,0.000057174148,0.0010000705,5.459833e-7,1.1464114e-7,0.0000042915067,0.00040964608],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9990256,0.00015714523,0.00038080045,0.00008418759,0.00014056699,0.00021170445],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986276,0.0005873876,0.0004107225,0.00005846913,0.000051210056,0.0002646079],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0014035832,0.00005629791,0.00016246685,0.000025272657,0.000104367966,0.00014496155,0.0001464197,0.000056809113,0.000259173],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0009113547,0.000039500166,0.000049195387,0.000031230265,0.00010053749,0.00067874993,0.000026788459,0.000071066504,0.000016542353],"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":[0.00001306076,0.000024485635,0.90441895,0.0000032781766,0.000039729675,0.0000018015764,0.00079657696,0.0000025138704,0.00043311573,0.08064334,0.0012460392,0.01237712],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0014972491,0.00040615498,0.7392132,0.00054666837,0.000077361714,0.0000134700385,0.0014663679,0.00026078554,0.0007652616,0.025538336,0.22976857,0.00044652956],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00086466415,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0014995195,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.22852254,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00044278032,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00010529486,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.28377622},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2471371869","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2016.11.011","title":"Bunching at the kink: Implications for spending responses to health insurance contracts","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":54,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"National Institute on Aging","keywords":"Counterfactual thinking; Economics; Context (archaeology); Incentive; Set (abstract data type); Object (grammar); Medicare Part D; Econometrics; Public economics; Actuarial science; Microeconomics; Prescription drug; Medical prescription; Computer science","score_opus":0.08456020567782002,"score_gpt":0.3494598422167804,"score_spread":0.26489963653896037,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2471371869","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":[0.86513335,0.00015144395,0.00748762,0.12508713,0.0007281536,0.00022825426,0.00009794766,0.000008825807,0.0010772723],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9938637,0.0010975692,0.0014421238,0.0018849801,0.00058532174,0.0000074748978,9.0951687e-7,0.000011826276,0.0011060883],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99878114,0.00017031076,0.00048031748,0.00012083266,0.00007645292,0.00037093225],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9976345,0.0010955683,0.0006016098,0.00017623522,0.00020634053,0.00028575968],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0039468487,0.00007734375,0.00019748048,0.000095622745,0.00078749814,0.00017182794,0.00044222784,0.000052296033,0.00001714355],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0014082814,0.000050075156,0.00011077879,0.000109298446,0.00009237136,0.0004895308,0.000041317122,0.00008393443,0.000009117581],"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":[0.00006148791,0.000049412098,0.70286113,0.0000046152436,0.000061802406,3.3452795e-7,0.0066379034,0.00007030265,0.0003745039,0.22673514,0.005397319,0.05774605],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004547975,0.00008295862,0.7286435,0.000020731353,0.000004343732,0.000011661752,0.0026146723,0.000008012428,0.0000067182555,0.009283333,0.2587687,0.00010060137],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000079997364,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0035779842,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.2533714,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00082087173,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0008511876,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.60568786},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2581166862","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104187","title":"Are changes of organizational form costly? Income shifting and business entry responses to taxes","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corporate Taxation and Avoidance","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":26,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"McMaster University","keywords":"Economics; Labour economics; Differential (mechanical device); Offset (computer science); Income tax; Business; Public economics","score_opus":0.04601897063835788,"score_gpt":0.21872592309859046,"score_spread":0.17270695246023257,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2581166862","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":[0.969503,0.000077056604,0.00036444736,0.029340163,0.0001738221,0.000061353916,0.00001136512,0.0000133255235,0.00045545795],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9935259,0.00006311505,0.0004695416,0.0048182737,0.0010495225,7.5867393e-7,0.0000033502067,0.000013861123,0.000055653156],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9993589,0.0000078400035,0.00035889237,0.000092980954,0.000077919256,0.00010348235],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99782103,0.000051766132,0.0014651536,0.00005533169,0.0005683903,0.00003834662],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00036194854,0.00008437825,0.00021156858,0.00023407461,0.000063447376,0.00020894002,0.0001519856,0.00003179861,0.000113103124],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0012962229,0.00008014663,0.00002971827,0.00041128564,0.000024510065,0.0009773005,0.00012744011,0.00007418058,0.000011262058],"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":[0.00011757071,0.000040788855,0.9739636,0.00021643711,0.00004737909,0.0000059994677,0.00017619644,0.00014262467,0.00038615323,0.018779574,0.00260371,0.0035199712],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010511543,0.000035416706,0.8740888,0.00012154483,0.000034950193,0.0000151233535,0.0013886272,0.0016272068,0.00018096568,0.0023245453,0.11887346,0.00025816812],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000006884814,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00008709452,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.11626975,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000025761927,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00006171936,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.32682848},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2737619412","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2017.07.004","title":"The political economy of higher education admission standards and participation gap","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":12,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université du Québec à Montréal","funders":"","keywords":"Voting; Economics; Politics; Distribution (mathematics); Test (biology); Demographic economics; Family income; Low income; Majority rule; Labour economics; Political science; Economic growth","score_opus":0.08231467087264754,"score_gpt":0.40741771499856316,"score_spread":0.3251030441259156,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2737619412","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":[0.8357331,0.0002441431,0.000007673959,0.06744033,0.00065701373,0.00003624691,0.000002481095,0.0000015724628,0.095877446],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99790376,0.0002512764,0.000049854123,0.0002868321,0.0010074173,0.0000012299741,2.584636e-7,0.0000027142073,0.0004966431],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9994284,0.000051260613,0.00026019462,0.00004379653,0.00007195485,0.00014439062],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99877894,0.00009872694,0.000524275,0.00012403392,0.00028520724,0.00018880858],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0014806279,0.000035554986,0.00009132657,0.000035040568,0.000557348,0.00035838026,0.00022066593,0.00004492077,0.00008034392],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00046419143,0.000026038239,0.00003525021,0.000012873253,0.00018153427,0.0010247431,0.000022158472,0.00008441442,0.0000011600666],"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":[0.000016944517,0.000027724922,0.15201463,0.0000061243927,0.000013926116,7.403201e-8,0.0003183736,9.2493843e-7,0.0000037197758,0.8192509,0.003639314,0.024707379],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00019218629,0.000047220456,0.16272889,0.000011899181,0.000011391746,0.0000013606752,0.0009632316,0.000027278775,0.00006786836,0.07777652,0.7581285,0.000043643122],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00007025372,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00031284508,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7544892,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00014255501,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0013282825,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.42867264},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2770115237","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2017.11.004","title":"Does inducing informal firms to formalize make sense? Experimental evidence from Benin","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Taxation and Compliance Studies","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":116,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada; World Bank Group; Department for International Development, UK Government; United States Agency for International Development","keywords":"Economics; Microeconomics; Business; Base (topology); Industrial organization; Test (biology)","score_opus":0.11024607346738366,"score_gpt":0.28548666337463324,"score_spread":0.17524058990724958,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2770115237","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":[0.9825601,0.0006247817,0.0010501579,0.0057209814,0.002145938,0.000094231764,0.000068877984,0.0000098817445,0.0077250507],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99482626,0.0003718559,0.0028666663,0.0006207833,0.0006718018,0.0000065639174,0.0000017699296,0.000015490732,0.0006187944],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9984001,0.000008990969,0.0010468038,0.0002063819,0.00003906382,0.00029869162],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9970261,0.000064562235,0.0021715423,0.00044491497,0.000086852706,0.00020602734],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007541902,0.00015922115,0.00047828114,0.00022354127,0.00039154093,0.0007657873,0.0005923501,0.0000773426,0.00037469208],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005852872,0.00013452026,0.00018198206,0.00004076517,0.00006476989,0.0023724213,0.00027864505,0.00019730939,0.00019904855],"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":[0.000102803904,0.00011895793,0.94482887,0.000015662428,0.0003300099,0.000013685837,0.00580625,0.00032076697,0.00010100938,0.03429882,0.002820339,0.011242832],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0013970715,0.00026207216,0.80242544,0.0001135502,0.000009715271,0.000031532938,0.0024895247,0.00081453763,0.0016784215,0.006815043,0.18342778,0.00053530745],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00018526833,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002572793,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.18060744,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001831346,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000059870134,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.73845047},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2921816017","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2019.01.005","title":"Higher pay, worse outcomes? The impact of mayoral wages on local government quality in Peru","year":2019,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":38,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Toronto Metropolitan University","funders":"","keywords":"Politics; Local government; Bureaucracy; Economics; Government (linguistics); Quality (philosophy); Competition (biology); Labour economics; Affect (linguistics); Public economics; Political science; Public administration; Sociology; Law","score_opus":0.045106465930869866,"score_gpt":0.3410351098934068,"score_spread":0.29592864396253693,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2921816017","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":[0.984713,0.000024483677,0.00008466241,0.005593789,0.0004755011,0.00010878274,0.000011044787,0.0000023361813,0.008986363],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.998214,0.00022911535,0.000017520073,0.00027382266,0.00010311389,7.5745027e-7,5.4274716e-7,0.000005628532,0.0011555136],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9986093,0.00018936966,0.0005427852,0.000088886336,0.00034527443,0.00022437505],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988523,0.00017966857,0.0006868937,0.00014682942,0.000051541207,0.00008277699],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0020095329,0.00008541043,0.00027048233,0.000033685257,0.00004665711,0.00007626322,0.00029935475,0.00007370894,0.0005152407],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00013254823,0.000048081696,0.00020717568,0.00010688175,0.00010020942,0.0004784072,0.00003206931,0.00017061032,0.000018276434],"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":[0.000053611104,0.00016580941,0.9216794,0.0000031259208,0.000037552087,8.5787735e-7,0.0007899228,0.0020967266,0.000003892828,0.069532104,0.00081110105,0.0048259343],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00070158887,0.00015766185,0.980079,0.000012930692,0.000004904154,4.488921e-7,0.002366645,0.00014055069,0.000014758802,0.0016747226,0.01476767,0.00007913652],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0010351245,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00072441867,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.06785738,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00140371,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00027833576,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5641525},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2945148302","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2019.104126","title":"Persistence of power: Repeated multilateral bargaining with endogenous agenda setting authority","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Game Theory and Voting Systems","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":20,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Queen's University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Economics; Persistence (discontinuity); Power (physics); Microeconomics; Outcome (game theory); Bargaining power; Inequity aversion; Inequality; Game theory; Econometrics; Public economics; Mathematics; Engineering","score_opus":0.13862403162352444,"score_gpt":0.22504615388837915,"score_spread":0.08642212226485471,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2945148302","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":[0.9845578,0.00045181712,0.0016013562,0.0010649017,0.00032138912,0.00009630501,0.00006230759,0.000018924076,0.011825176],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9971302,0.000037355698,0.0023134155,0.00024111324,0.00018561156,9.763231e-7,0.0000029065095,0.000027640637,0.000060758714],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9979001,0.00006666432,0.0014327681,0.0002560512,0.000036433234,0.0003079595],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9969157,0.00010350095,0.0024220464,0.00020374364,0.00013726548,0.0002177361],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0023100614,0.00016727862,0.0007036392,0.00019856337,0.00009395253,0.000112196496,0.00041369445,0.000096318305,0.00013966742],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00045547224,0.00016995742,0.00022141128,0.00017073986,0.000075728916,0.00056905445,0.000057768702,0.00031976268,0.000027328508],"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":[0.0005514963,0.0003557433,0.72664404,0.00032216287,0.0016393731,0.00017327782,0.033994626,0.0069288015,0.0020630425,0.22346528,0.0004400573,0.0034221085],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.05227263,0.02920102,0.25197232,0.0021605145,0.00078919786,0.012893752,0.09452106,0.21981898,0.024875112,0.0692055,0.23055546,0.011734466],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000018547124,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000032351454,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.47467172,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00012115081,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00010198354,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.69306624},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2972313579","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104223","title":"Adjustment cost and incentives to work: Evidence from a disability insurance program","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":22,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Manitoba","funders":"University of Melbourne; University of Calgary","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Earnings; Disability insurance; Work (physics); Context (archaeology); Price elasticity of demand; Labour economics; Microeconomics; Social security; Accounting","score_opus":0.08196619627696262,"score_gpt":0.31618681673586296,"score_spread":0.23422062045890035,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W2972313579","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":[0.9750517,0.00079728256,0.0004163822,0.022600802,0.0004710833,0.0003408287,0.000025659047,0.000017917146,0.00027833966],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9923211,0.0023756805,0.0038117187,0.0008759449,0.00057957036,0.00000916154,0.000001220054,0.000007412691,0.000018223433],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988145,0.00016191446,0.00041788374,0.00019898142,0.00013710544,0.0002695624],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986727,0.00019226763,0.00029184064,0.000109731525,0.00016205505,0.0005714002],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0008926855,0.00010050852,0.00025218504,0.000029075607,0.0001419404,0.0002714791,0.00036118034,0.000068996866,0.000031989686],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008070717,0.000095590825,0.00007487551,0.00022373817,0.00024520291,0.00081171136,0.000093933784,0.00018063516,0.0000064898877],"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":[0.000034650966,0.00009911945,0.90738606,0.000006304591,0.00003525775,0.0000011155119,0.012919771,0.00006957893,0.000005348109,0.0010220057,0.00033907816,0.078081705],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00025811305,0.0001249665,0.96312046,0.000031070645,0.0000119933175,5.314543e-7,0.009638935,0.00018401747,0.0000019114543,0.0006468226,0.025863998,0.00011717985],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00019742455,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00091703463,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.07796452,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002911583,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00030862232,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.38980806},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3012461273","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104161","title":"Temperature and temperament: Evidence from Twitter","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Climate Change Communication and Perception","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":165,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Nonmarket forces; Construct (python library); Sentiment analysis; Economics; Econometrics; Value (mathematics); Suite; Willingness to pay; Social media; Goods and services; Geography; Statistics; Computer science; Microeconomics; Economy; Artificial intelligence; Mathematics","score_opus":0.6421782445681378,"score_gpt":0.4253992196649341,"score_spread":0.21677902490320367,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3012461273","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":[0.8567856,0.00066955766,0.00001460634,0.14122237,0.00014207888,0.00003413713,0.000004024762,0.0000062477216,0.0011213879],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.96986973,0.024851581,0.00045530417,0.0040224283,0.00073971547,6.2340956e-7,0.0000023139212,0.0000044190438,0.000053911634],"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.999438,0.00012839696,0.0002188527,0.000067008375,0.00006121673,0.00008651839],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992928,0.00014689284,0.00019300851,0.00007803407,0.00009522192,0.00019407913],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005651663,0.000045436165,0.00011402973,0.000034288954,0.00013951672,0.0003036055,0.00023289435,0.00006336206,0.0007809864],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00033302975,0.000042078223,0.00004195328,0.000056537367,0.00007478164,0.00067760615,0.000045054363,0.0001667259,0.000018095221],"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":[0.00013838754,0.00015956651,0.29738626,0.00004528671,0.0002120243,0.000009207184,0.49614072,0.000033318327,0.013607297,0.009789547,0.050537203,0.13194118],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00076721585,0.00015437606,0.0433834,0.00010988749,0.000034095876,0.000008315251,0.054653067,0.000388214,0.0000971244,0.0020415508,0.89808816,0.0002745996],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00009906738,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0003265494,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8475509,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007591146,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00010364289,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.8551253},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3019713972","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104238","title":"Labor demand in the time of COVID-19: Evidence from vacancy postings and UI claims","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":450,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McGill University","funders":"Canada Excellence Research Chairs, Government of Canada; Canada Research Chairs","keywords":"Unemployment; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Hospitality; Economics; Labour economics; Work (physics); Demographic economics; Law; Economic growth; Engineering; Political science; Medicine","score_opus":0.09821897463711056,"score_gpt":0.27880090679384056,"score_spread":0.18058193215673002,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3019713972","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":[0.9171912,0.004391224,0.0009922398,0.076752655,0.00013133165,0.00013331347,0.00014707849,0.000005908316,0.0002550553],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98236865,0.0021932216,0.0005538197,0.014573693,0.00026595272,0.000001883369,0.0000028708105,0.000017405097,0.000022477116],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99801964,0.00007573439,0.0013467014,0.00025457467,0.000045124267,0.00025824842],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9964001,0.0013102784,0.0016360019,0.00022880817,0.0000620905,0.00036269877],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0028143874,0.00015146035,0.0006293809,0.00027169945,0.000052859403,0.00015313354,0.00064167706,0.000120385004,0.00031139073],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0063190125,0.00014056667,0.0001167325,0.0002838599,0.00009138175,0.00095785083,0.00010876554,0.00035674733,0.00003816342],"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":[0.000116917654,0.00007496172,0.9702725,0.0001061826,0.00013582341,0.000021334992,0.011053914,0.00087456196,0.00014104789,0.01075413,0.0053607374,0.0010879348],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.006816497,0.0011748562,0.65857583,0.00023790293,0.00008852805,0.0001787948,0.0025448748,0.030398307,0.00016983927,0.13768579,0.16109242,0.001036374],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00034953744,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00006855784,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.31169662,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002607333,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0004653009,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.75649047},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3022860187","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104243","title":"Relaxing household liquidity constraints through social security","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":30,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Unemployment; Social security; Economics; Consumption (sociology); Market liquidity; Cash; Quarter (Canadian coin); Labour economics; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Public economics; Demographic economics; Finance; Economic growth","score_opus":0.07641395909109056,"score_gpt":0.23452644659841582,"score_spread":0.15811248750732526,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3022860187","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":[0.9850344,0.000060393104,0.00020835416,0.008136411,0.0005141001,0.00007578662,0.0000086206655,0.000040760402,0.0059211496],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98829246,0.000051680858,0.00035024987,0.0059617604,0.005288699,8.316799e-7,0.000011512754,0.000028041502,0.000014775488],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99840045,0.000024529727,0.0008781721,0.00021213038,0.00018171227,0.00030302396],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9980712,0.000041844552,0.0013916369,0.00011867461,0.00033457676,0.00004205865],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00090004725,0.0001862895,0.00047713504,0.00016730133,0.00023200494,0.00054617913,0.00043110832,0.00011360211,0.00055133813],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00047432585,0.00018784567,0.00035421332,0.00033396887,0.00012463106,0.0037177627,0.00019373996,0.00036689267,0.000079675396],"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":[0.00020184401,0.00035151158,0.6419459,0.00027657746,0.00028391066,0.000104620805,0.0017853935,0.0003757915,0.00024138339,0.24173602,0.10901659,0.0036804795],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0034970185,0.00011637876,0.06331092,0.00008266992,0.00050517096,0.000036439727,0.0015194732,0.010856005,0.00014339494,0.03899269,0.87976915,0.0011707043],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000036712285,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00003800937,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.77075255,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00010563222,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00012493622,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7660124},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3025968556","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104346","title":"COVID-19, lockdowns and well-being: Evidence from Google Trends","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"COVID-19 epidemiological studies","field":"Mathematics","cited_by":648,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council; Agence Nationale de la Recherche","keywords":"Loneliness; Worry; Mental health; Regression discontinuity design; Sadness; Boredom; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Pandemic; Government (linguistics); Psychology; Demographic economics; Population; Bandwagon effect; Poverty; Demography; Environmental health; Medicine; Economics; Economic growth; Psychiatry; Social psychology; Anger; Sociology; Anxiety","score_opus":0.37364798970538265,"score_gpt":0.40739224824763276,"score_spread":0.033744258542250105,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3025968556","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":[0.7039374,0.0015003897,0.011820355,0.28061038,0.00023915576,0.00008719431,0.000016092165,0.00005441243,0.0017345975],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9665353,0.0024880224,0.010855219,0.019041121,0.0008923758,0.0000034658183,0.000001673196,0.00002494374,0.00015789933],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9981103,0.00019546508,0.0010110749,0.00028564304,0.000109662484,0.00028783493],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9916845,0.006121885,0.0009506044,0.00020220286,0.00009185068,0.00094896497],"candidate_categories":["metaresearch"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0017061908,0.0001996124,0.0007496248,0.00011336815,0.0001345345,0.00012348413,0.00044830874,0.00012249108,0.0008058436],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0316995,0.00015891531,0.00020938787,0.00015223074,0.00013557321,0.00049819675,0.00029724717,0.00036502947,0.000021405216],"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":[0.0003476707,0.0003419283,0.47349545,0.00041503666,0.0014272179,0.00015913576,0.00974113,0.00090413826,0.00023158302,0.10148418,0.38091746,0.03053508],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0018136572,0.00069967384,0.018714454,0.00008019933,0.00023361057,0.000071257804,0.0010512819,0.006016694,0.00007708903,0.4300271,0.54063815,0.0005768152],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00007132477,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00010328908,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.454781,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00035705467,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00028868177,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9764569},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3036225123","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104271","title":"The impact of COVID-19 on student experiences and expectations: Evidence from a survey","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":897,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council","keywords":"Socioeconomic status; Graduation (instrument); Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Quarter (Canadian coin); Pandemic; Demographic economics; Internship; Economics; Psychology; Demography; Medicine; Economic growth; Sociology; Geography; Population","score_opus":0.21696784936050353,"score_gpt":0.3660043568842698,"score_spread":0.14903650752376627,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3036225123","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":[0.98561275,0.0051924195,0.0010249277,0.007569329,0.00024920036,0.00012388243,0.00011298683,0.000005789822,0.00010872674],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9963082,0.0026795934,0.000108444176,0.0007084633,0.00016327643,0.00000613767,0.0000021917303,0.000012711933,0.000010974948],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9982068,0.000110260924,0.0011744336,0.0002340304,0.0000527791,0.00022168233],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9947606,0.0027074753,0.0017490028,0.00023443592,0.000086652544,0.0004618764],"candidate_categories":["metaresearch"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002253171,0.00014523185,0.0004984643,0.0001806685,0.00012780564,0.0002852135,0.00058421784,0.00006659951,0.00015628728],"category_scores_gemma":[0.010850217,0.00011521461,0.00018448423,0.00019405535,0.00014301535,0.00071613165,0.000092615286,0.00020254763,0.000018808085],"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":[0.00016940286,0.000085541324,0.9488184,0.000009878551,0.00030422056,0.000003369342,0.04198668,0.0020293393,0.000012598949,0.0027996907,0.0029396797,0.00084120943],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0018995467,0.0015143334,0.95493263,0.000038180948,0.000014563696,0.000016766122,0.021607239,0.005814844,0.000047015168,0.008703985,0.0050260164,0.00038490674],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000981636,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00016957875,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.020379443,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00048463084,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0005788579,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9974818},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3111087637","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104940","title":"Tax competition in the presence of profit shifting","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corporate Taxation and Avoidance","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":11,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation; Simon Fraser University","funders":"Universität Mannheim; University of Toronto; Queen's University; Agence Nationale de la Recherche; University of Alberta; Aix-Marseille Université; Yale-NUS College; Yale University","keywords":"Economics; Tax competition; Profit (economics); Microeconomics; Monetary economics; Ad valorem tax; Public economics; Tax reform","score_opus":0.053296376285556606,"score_gpt":0.23703421240277692,"score_spread":0.1837378361172203,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3111087637","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":[0.9864415,0.000014248065,0.00011391009,0.007712865,0.00022846644,0.00006342262,0.0000010530449,0.00000748002,0.005417036],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9989653,0.000028822937,0.000060125607,0.00040501982,0.00043949715,0.000001680549,0.0000034306413,0.000004865803,0.00009121275],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9993782,0.000014408076,0.00037944913,0.000053829768,0.000074153984,0.00009993192],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99875474,0.00007575569,0.00095825637,0.00008175955,0.00012410602,0.000005409652],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015988133,0.000046040164,0.00011115812,0.00027890498,0.00003791884,0.00016616566,0.00025554423,0.00002005296,0.000053347077],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00028784998,0.00003522119,0.00004524743,0.00040817843,0.000024699497,0.001127593,0.000045178345,0.000108443164,0.00003750579],"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":[0.000020412836,0.00006598059,0.51032406,0.00013811798,0.00002010157,0.000011810086,0.00029702287,0.0028874108,0.00030545425,0.46838605,0.006687081,0.010856502],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012841808,0.000029502702,0.77373284,0.0001593267,0.000018838384,0.000016068574,0.0049449545,0.044711314,0.00009096544,0.039202332,0.13558182,0.00022785924],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003732497,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00024818198,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.42918372,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001888798,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000038421887,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.16023393},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3122452275","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2014.11.009","title":"The architecture of federations: Constitutions, bargaining, and moral hazard","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":15,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canadian Institute for Advanced Research; Simon Fraser University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research","keywords":"Decentralization; Economics; Moral hazard; Politics; Corporate governance; Government (linguistics); Ex-ante; Institution; Yield (engineering); Microeconomics; Public economics; Public administration; Incentive; Market economy; Finance; Macroeconomics; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.025575849892027106,"score_gpt":0.25784646933206823,"score_spread":0.23227061944004113,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3122452275","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":[0.81496674,0.0013141148,0.055366315,0.022762956,0.0009970496,0.00016846787,0.000008674831,0.000014144533,0.10440153],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9968312,0.0022044866,0.00054908637,0.00015595509,0.00016541088,5.136777e-7,4.708239e-7,0.0000019492904,0.00009094656],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99949205,0.000068867994,0.00023651445,0.00003398467,0.00007501042,0.00009359342],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994661,0.00011909797,0.00023166496,0.00004618274,0.000079513695,0.00005742749],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009217824,0.00003292102,0.00008474049,0.000026155789,0.00032129028,0.00016357457,0.00009954361,0.000033919896,0.000009022543],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004038694,0.000024095414,0.000031762294,0.000040973435,0.00026001284,0.00025677582,0.0000103449065,0.00006280009,6.6682304e-7],"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":[0.0000026903197,0.0000080409745,0.017881803,0.0000010618799,0.000011971044,8.442707e-8,0.00040979247,0.000369263,0.0000028298684,0.9614559,0.0012591047,0.01859746],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004960645,0.00009103715,0.00942597,0.000016720822,0.000016833126,0.000010494404,0.0021682614,0.001516561,0.00006312549,0.14604357,0.84005773,0.00009361118],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000014942275,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00053795025,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.83879864,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00005239647,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00022257102,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.24711375},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3122674535","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104353","title":"Housing liquidity and long-term care insurance demand: A quantitative evaluation","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":19,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université Laval; HEC Montréal","funders":"European Commission; Compute Canada","keywords":"Bequest; Market liquidity; Long-term care insurance; Economics; Order (exchange); Term (time); Long-term care; Monetary economics; Actuarial science; Business; Finance; Medicine","score_opus":0.04857241871524752,"score_gpt":0.2821374140949782,"score_spread":0.2335649953797307,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3122674535","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":[0.9962493,0.0021367143,0.00025932214,0.0004539301,0.00042467003,0.000082673854,0.000002895125,0.000008297972,0.00038218903],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9979381,0.00032295432,0.0005964243,0.00040188208,0.0006767765,0.000001641224,0.000029760495,0.000015142304,0.0000173476],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988858,0.000045157583,0.00054495933,0.0001806787,0.00017644778,0.00016691793],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9972456,0.000053888434,0.0009055516,0.00013934575,0.0016323056,0.000023280247],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001230794,0.00012568722,0.00030798864,0.0003013173,0.00015657845,0.00058674713,0.00012878921,0.000056959736,0.00012536398],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006077354,0.00012528045,0.00012892648,0.00025861946,0.000040728304,0.0027365577,0.00010637054,0.00013236185,0.000012429543],"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":[0.000024767383,0.000039457995,0.99057573,0.0000894673,0.000037841724,0.000015928521,0.00016769,0.00036121174,0.00008675364,0.0026743694,0.00014040236,0.0057864073],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00091463124,0.000024969208,0.98708886,0.00010960345,0.00019298856,0.000015203885,0.0004777114,0.007654861,0.00008268937,0.0013013994,0.0019387587,0.00019835285],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000024954234,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00060342345,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.0072936495,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00014033068,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00019115671,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5658016},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3122757724","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105066","title":"The long-run impacts of adolescent drinking: Evidence from Zero Tolerance Laws","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies","field":"Energy","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université de Montréal","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Binge drinking; Adolescent health; Educational attainment; Psychology; Injury prevention; Demographic economics; Poison control; Medicine; Economics; Environmental health; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.029051485726176034,"score_gpt":0.2501214528689981,"score_spread":0.2210699671428221,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3122757724","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":[0.98536724,0.0080657555,0.0013735708,0.0033349004,0.00095059024,0.000036892823,0.00001055827,0.000014443637,0.00084605796],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9856549,0.01322853,0.00020960068,0.00023864752,0.00039571297,0.0000015904252,0.0000036069785,0.000023278119,0.0002441694],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99871296,0.00005202921,0.00074242614,0.00013097716,0.00013729619,0.0002243158],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988442,0.00026048534,0.00045382883,0.00024650965,0.0000546789,0.00014031015],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005725256,0.00013109617,0.0002414478,0.00009879885,0.000073707495,0.00019947768,0.00037729647,0.00006835579,0.000092844435],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00007239045,0.000096455486,0.00020438322,0.00008556752,0.00011177571,0.0007384396,0.000021783608,0.00022825935,0.00001656486],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.00018689562,0.00041156006,0.3063769,0.00025412836,0.0017239659,0.000107989326,0.004871159,0.19164301,0.0043644845,0.39963415,0.007411944,0.08301378],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00089027645,0.00019987857,0.6814347,0.0009908737,0.00016661984,0.000054741635,0.00038876338,0.0034204354,0.011610941,0.021172097,0.27924767,0.00042300072],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00035837805,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0024673594,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.37846208,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00014439845,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001585579,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.39333403},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3123415952","doi":"10.1016/s0047-2727(03)00074-4","title":"Competition and the reform of incentive schemes in the regulated sector","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Auction Theory and Applications","field":"Decision Sciences","cited_by":12,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on Organizations; Université de Montréal","funders":"","keywords":"Incentive; Adverse selection; Principal (computer security); Constraint (computer-aided design); Competition (biology); Economics; Microeconomics; Private information retrieval; Function (biology); Principal–agent problem; Participation constraint; Private sector; Industrial organization; Public economics; Computer science; Finance; Corporate governance; Mathematics","score_opus":0.0845461713437377,"score_gpt":0.31763270604817534,"score_spread":0.23308653470443763,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3123415952","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":[0.98545265,0.00009100844,0.0018777349,0.0063961055,0.00008888454,0.00006873663,0.000002968299,9.657047e-7,0.006020929],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99937296,0.00008487569,0.00024300504,0.00016612966,0.000032425596,0.0000016278514,2.902275e-7,0.0000016986505,0.00009698401],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99889326,0.000307354,0.00056367705,0.00006339422,0.00011201843,0.000060297505],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99827844,0.0006287075,0.00071624527,0.00016992971,0.00018160828,0.000025090645],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0072459085,0.000038501505,0.00014580361,0.000118393495,0.00007919739,0.00009945112,0.0003112113,0.000027480512,0.00011891846],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00059193367,0.000018071389,0.00005830607,0.00024195337,0.0002403886,0.00036509882,0.00001781909,0.000120903824,0.00000389624],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000020353824,0.000024586721,0.0009888775,4.804159e-7,0.0000095769055,1.0144696e-7,0.00043608304,0.000044159522,0.000019797784,0.99684274,0.00010349246,0.0015097198],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0014038014,0.000042762378,0.013850239,0.000008025885,0.000009325487,0.00009513061,0.018450843,0.00063623505,0.00065895077,0.88227886,0.08251055,0.000055260498],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000033039464,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000023688386,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.1145639,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000043815577,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00006441841,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.25113016},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3123556337","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2006.10.002","title":"Assortative marriage and the effects of government homecare subsidy programs on gender wage and participation inequality","year":2006,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":16,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"","keywords":"Subsidy; Economics; Labour economics; Inequality; Government (linguistics); Wage inequality; Wage; Affect (linguistics); Demographic economics; Market economy","score_opus":0.02977717320365006,"score_gpt":0.27468594624794346,"score_spread":0.2449087730442934,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3123556337","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":[0.99646854,0.00022439969,0.00017220434,0.0005537152,0.00024832477,0.00021206682,0.000016501808,0.0000033520896,0.002100918],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9991159,0.00044536157,0.00012376967,0.000091943584,0.00013842317,0.0000056115396,0.000002654977,0.0000058903815,0.00007047607],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988245,0.00033269316,0.00038279814,0.0000953339,0.00019288668,0.00017179453],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99872,0.0004380289,0.00057254103,0.0000817269,0.00010141408,0.000086286374],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0020313703,0.00008156465,0.0002283841,0.000031765656,0.00013610434,0.0001256423,0.00010749376,0.000065756576,0.0000036372444],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003158059,0.00005858233,0.000059331735,0.00006795106,0.00024550184,0.00025279305,0.00002345842,0.0001184063,2.5902355e-7],"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":[0.0000607423,0.0001883008,0.7311629,0.000047531168,0.00011367046,0.0000025760953,0.016446143,0.000048159967,0.0000226632,0.24409865,0.00010609013,0.007702548],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0018311995,0.00020509795,0.96587974,0.000015116882,0.000058941412,0.0000012547137,0.014942826,0.00034890132,0.000033772067,0.015762642,0.00081638515,0.0001041382],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00032223773,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0021938179,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.23471679,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00015819246,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008167987,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.2388918},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3123693920","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2014.06.006","title":"Communication in multilateral bargaining","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":77,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Cheap talk; Economic rent; Economics; Microeconomics; Bargaining power; Voting; Power (physics); Test (biology); Public economics; Law; Political science; Politics","score_opus":0.06714544321384773,"score_gpt":0.3396332812284158,"score_spread":0.27248783801456805,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3123693920","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":[0.9501963,0.00014211154,0.000027781685,0.0025276484,0.00021596398,0.000043015967,5.843538e-7,0.0000057689244,0.0468408],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9968698,0.00045718293,0.0022755135,0.00017516063,0.00012773585,0.000001780444,6.754185e-7,0.0000067625115,0.00008536236],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99910533,0.00017071929,0.00044124297,0.000064171334,0.000040791525,0.00017774658],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.999256,0.00011989648,0.0003622268,0.00010829176,0.000065155175,0.00008838992],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00231124,0.00005659441,0.0001860285,0.00014335866,0.00014662594,0.00011941595,0.00033064283,0.000052337582,0.000046185978],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00019159078,0.000061428625,0.00005930537,0.000051721716,0.00012783226,0.00076568115,0.00006312577,0.00014996494,0.000011827738],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.000015675838,0.00017018047,0.6239356,0.0000021969547,0.000031620133,0.000001259041,0.023813775,0.00027147593,0.00013231572,0.32260263,0.00039463778,0.028628629],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.008206541,0.00065438537,0.2774651,0.00018648809,0.00005155841,0.00003962905,0.107724816,0.00722219,0.0011137535,0.1333484,0.46249,0.0014971229],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00041768738,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003160135,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.46209535,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00040605798,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00010210795,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.25049865},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3124126476","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.11.018","title":"Votes or money? Theory and evidence from the US Congress","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":112,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canadian Institute for Advanced Research; University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Legislator; Interest group; Voting; Economics; Representation (politics); Simple (philosophy); Proportional representation; Group (periodic table); Microeconomics; Econometrics; Public economics; Political science; Law; Democracy; Politics","score_opus":0.05835932403874412,"score_gpt":0.24328291359451318,"score_spread":0.18492358955576904,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3124126476","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":[0.9824431,0.0022276656,0.0002486648,0.008935095,0.0019829336,0.00008896605,0.00009879632,0.000009109738,0.0039656702],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99561507,0.00072734046,0.00058120093,0.0015709812,0.0012095716,0.0000035941127,0.0000015831416,0.000024925883,0.0002657489],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9982988,0.000053894124,0.0010630282,0.00025819012,0.000020571057,0.00030548286],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99656105,0.001546489,0.0012289272,0.0003897905,0.000051686533,0.00022204506],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0035053052,0.00017657473,0.00050846837,0.00015680412,0.00015387275,0.00042339406,0.00070054294,0.0001626892,0.00043214386],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0022823901,0.00013274964,0.00015908222,0.00007667871,0.00027413643,0.0013177372,0.00013503405,0.0005749795,0.00010098778],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00013774387,0.000053314656,0.34364942,0.000011959314,0.00022352187,0.0000053150948,0.0005714443,0.000014698745,0.000046460264,0.64784914,0.0037816702,0.0036552916],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00089561456,0.00012923937,0.2164436,0.00003260691,0.000023067829,0.00012816388,0.00022031147,0.0012250964,0.00012595093,0.7145266,0.0659301,0.00031966937],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013143361,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00041293338,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.12720582,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000060587074,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00010320949,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5413373},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3126112985","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.11.009","title":"Separation of powers and the budget process","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":22,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Canadian Institute for Advanced Research","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Process (computing); Budget process; Separation (statistics); Separation of powers; Macroeconomics; Computer science; Political science; Legislature","score_opus":0.030339845559220778,"score_gpt":0.2547465972725534,"score_spread":0.2244067517133326,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3126112985","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":[0.92663556,0.0007671199,0.0017051465,0.0041196523,0.0004229274,0.00009060007,0.000019082943,0.0000035245764,0.0662364],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9988431,0.00014614996,0.00021615245,0.0004312182,0.00026721833,9.703258e-7,0.0000013035648,0.000011678792,0.00008226396],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99836344,0.000014129981,0.0012685618,0.00012406202,0.000017196926,0.00021260921],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9979261,0.00017406783,0.0015800495,0.00014882673,0.000062663974,0.00010827302],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004056696,0.00009963306,0.00045668252,0.00028658367,0.000059264083,0.00007355196,0.00026137294,0.000085954474,0.000036233094],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00028357832,0.00008506303,0.00014179443,0.0000955357,0.00021320036,0.00063655287,0.000031695134,0.00017143386,0.00001389411],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00011315781,0.000044424814,0.050315496,0.000023855328,0.000115084455,6.831048e-7,0.00094844314,0.00006352851,0.0000028647332,0.94667345,0.00057011936,0.0011289186],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.003925396,0.00017887217,0.05695388,0.00001215209,0.000018080602,0.00010954906,0.00096001104,0.0025756431,0.00023360878,0.90918964,0.025595427,0.00024771507],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000015088397,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000021032576,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.072207496,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007646019,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00004860617,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.34687698},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3126138030","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2008.07.004","title":"Born on the first of July: An (un)natural experiment in birth timing","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Global Maternal and Child Health","field":"Medicine","cited_by":157,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Natural experiment; Quarter (Canadian coin); Government (linguistics); Demography; Medicine; Economics; Demographic economics; History; Sociology","score_opus":0.0489548630155349,"score_gpt":0.27310121627764233,"score_spread":0.22414635326210744,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3126138030","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":[0.98502517,0.00025029865,0.0000024696224,0.012981444,0.00023748838,0.00007160836,0.000002557119,0.0000029752457,0.0014259897],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9966801,0.00039135566,0.00021269065,0.0023930713,0.00024663025,7.4747675e-7,7.502804e-7,0.0000077001305,0.00006696816],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99919826,0.000025760843,0.0004573189,0.00007085735,0.000086404085,0.00016141197],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993189,0.000036910384,0.00032007284,0.00013541416,0.00006487391,0.00012381528],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00039872678,0.000076638375,0.00025355595,0.00012229504,0.00005308208,0.000011411607,0.00014395718,0.000036472422,0.00006814782],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00003889667,0.00004785447,0.00007827756,0.00005608129,0.00004011579,0.00015264012,0.000020982423,0.0002471907,0.0000071227273],"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":[0.0017872863,0.0033999232,0.9175796,0.0002500604,0.00047564672,0.00046638137,0.010176058,0.00066836004,0.00080145925,0.03325222,0.013091674,0.01805134],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0035003885,0.0017167788,0.91631305,0.00021725097,0.000019695795,0.0015927514,0.001190177,0.0009271839,0.0030641686,0.0008338616,0.070454076,0.00017062807],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000036522357,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000033672324,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.057362404,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00015900085,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00014976085,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.19514488},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3162752272","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104879","title":"Crowding in with impure altruism: Theory and evidence from volunteerism in national parks","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":15,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"McGill University; University of California, Santa Barbara; University of Connecticut; Columbia University; University of Pittsburgh; Stanford University; Carnegie Mellon University; University of California Berkeley; Yale University","keywords":"Altruism (biology); Crowding out; Crowds; Public good; Economics; Crowding; Liberian dollar; Empirical evidence; Public economics; Microeconomics; Social psychology; Psychology; Monetary economics; Finance; Statistics","score_opus":0.05781416193498258,"score_gpt":0.24717426187841882,"score_spread":0.18936009994343622,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3162752272","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":[0.9906927,0.0011301059,0.00018613401,0.0035282401,0.00027602183,0.000073213014,0.000046027053,0.0000085568145,0.0040590162],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99838483,0.000557163,0.0003010517,0.00037400768,0.00028085732,0.0000059159443,0.0000045264724,0.00002137947,0.000070271475],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99829847,0.000046035202,0.0010344613,0.00026899079,0.000028067347,0.0003239876],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99845666,0.0005677031,0.0006884607,0.0001291308,0.00003408015,0.00012398513],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004003056,0.00014302577,0.00048553757,0.0009597722,0.00004149895,0.00015994204,0.0002822214,0.00012926129,0.00006408346],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000735269,0.00015253467,0.00007047826,0.00028107027,0.00007620607,0.0013366571,0.00007503065,0.0003597586,0.000053868134],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.0000857696,0.00002933432,0.7515865,0.000018591036,0.00006424998,0.000016119939,0.0012087189,0.0006419032,0.0000086794835,0.24486834,0.00066612975,0.0008056581],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00089671474,0.00006062406,0.4922036,0.000075475815,0.0000023178889,0.000024756435,0.00036467728,0.006448336,0.000010230535,0.4980662,0.0016662709,0.00018083134],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013524886,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0003586279,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.2593829,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00034241128,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00012523707,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.62201834},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3199741516","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104482","title":"Journal-based replication of experiments: An application to “Being Chosen to Lead”","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":13,"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 British Columbia","funders":"Marcus och Amalia Wallenbergs minnesfond; Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse; Canada Excellence Research Chairs, Government of Canada; Austrian Science Fund; Jan Wallanders och Tom Hedelius Stiftelse samt Tore Browaldhs Stiftelse; National Science Foundation","keywords":"Replication (statistics); Computer science; Publishing; Mechanism (biology); Reliability (semiconductor); Data science; Political science; Biology; Epistemology; Law; Philosophy","score_opus":0.0745627796491964,"score_gpt":0.38234857605391154,"score_spread":0.30778579640471515,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3199741516","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":[0.9805777,0.00014721003,0.0033544933,0.0113044605,0.00044637802,0.00018902017,0.000004994234,0.0000096482245,0.0039660614],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98381543,0.00013509094,0.014511943,0.0009243642,0.0004301797,0.00001568098,0.0000036167291,0.000018556599,0.00014514098],"study_design_codex":"bench_or_experimental","study_design_gemma":"bench_or_experimental","domain_scores_codex":[0.9983731,0.00013796655,0.0008541141,0.00023636749,0.00014495311,0.00025349768],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99770087,0.00005954569,0.00079318485,0.0003728361,0.00065870263,0.00041486952],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001990277,0.00010805556,0.0003219434,0.00025224284,0.00027313735,0.00023440405,0.00046733062,0.000071899645,0.000066470755],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00040338465,0.00012246081,0.0001298396,0.00022591277,0.000067252804,0.0008746771,0.0000715477,0.000140176,0.000017346176],"study_design_candidate":"bench_or_experimental","study_design_consensus":"bench_or_experimental","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00027183816,0.0028424526,0.15540253,0.000037316528,0.0004704846,0.000023674167,0.08474368,0.0060004694,0.33458236,0.13945231,0.0068374765,0.26933542],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0029461512,0.0016162222,0.019352786,0.00015814506,0.00012341412,0.000095669464,0.1147114,0.000733374,0.44421846,0.009727719,0.4050546,0.0012620686],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00014910693,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0005967426,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.3982171,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0009918002,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0006927949,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.49938068},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3205007054","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104521","title":"Environmental regulations and international trade: A quantitative economic analysis of world pollution emissions","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":109,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"National Office for Philosophy and Social Sciences; Central University of Finance and Economics; National Natural Science Foundation of China","keywords":"Economics; International trade; Productivity; Free trade; Production (economics); Trade barrier; Natural resource economics; Environmental pollution; International economics; Pollution; Environmental policy; Commercial policy; Porter hypothesis; Environmental regulation; Environmental protection; Environmental science; Macroeconomics; Ecology","score_opus":0.041533591998854036,"score_gpt":0.24132753710941282,"score_spread":0.19979394511055878,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3205007054","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":[0.9833225,0.00141277,0.0018957368,0.0068179066,0.0005713463,0.000054773715,0.000729319,0.000005241452,0.0051904055],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9933122,0.0020271603,0.0037340668,0.00015626446,0.00010451264,0.00000278119,0.00006644023,0.000021662152,0.0005749126],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9978399,0.000040510018,0.0015605161,0.00032930734,0.000027584749,0.00020214326],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9974539,0.00012033905,0.0019507151,0.00027982215,0.000008984789,0.00018621035],"candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00078409485,0.0001615244,0.000697264,0.0012606616,0.000075126576,0.000094125295,0.00025985396,0.000091523136,0.0013627645],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00010064353,0.00020668838,0.00038148154,0.00021452515,0.00014998432,0.0008305652,0.00010521445,0.00016967463,0.000016341464],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.00002183661,0.00026362608,0.3070051,0.0000066532284,0.0034575618,0.0000036715148,0.00039102024,0.029586062,0.00028056002,0.6570167,0.00044866037,0.0015185843],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0014721535,0.00009204778,0.86138695,0.000013870533,0.00031326275,0.00005740418,0.0010224894,0.050852034,0.00033146713,0.026964651,0.057073716,0.000419962],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001882055,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001648879,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.63005203,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0006761757,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000085831125,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9995501},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3207314116","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104799","title":"Measuring corruption in the field using behavioral games","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corruption and Economic Development","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":18,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"Language change; Dictator game; Politics; Dimension (graph theory); Field (mathematics); Economics; Political corruption; Public economics; Political science; Microeconomics; Law","score_opus":0.2749918949217385,"score_gpt":0.3732642728587347,"score_spread":0.09827237793699622,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3207314116","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":[0.9871132,0.000016740689,0.00010163272,0.0076134265,0.0010095453,0.000052189254,5.243316e-7,0.000008572873,0.0040841885],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9986517,0.00027585015,0.00016334381,0.00037050675,0.00027891598,0.0000013561072,5.608347e-7,0.0000040737755,0.00025369227],"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9992173,0.00009521143,0.00035620178,0.00006151292,0.00008079317,0.0001889964],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994581,0.00014130621,0.00022679397,0.00006422306,0.00004878328,0.000060794686],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0035346837,0.00004549455,0.00011022946,0.00024574774,0.00014260889,0.0001963104,0.00025582706,0.000050191797,0.00016114012],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00019619017,0.000039902447,0.00006719759,0.00017534738,0.00003041714,0.00047394732,0.000025854306,0.00014004186,0.000031029187],"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":[0.000026912394,0.00016527876,0.38229915,0.000008609161,0.000036762485,0.00003115455,0.046983708,0.002021638,0.00005272556,0.021812832,0.0038170256,0.5427442],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0011558553,0.00011794714,0.23009373,0.000057293248,0.000025137771,0.00006057702,0.105155416,0.0034081282,0.00002689724,0.0033368003,0.65618265,0.00037956526],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00021742156,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0021334947,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6523656,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00032772037,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000349673,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.18930258},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3210631855","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104515","title":"More birds than stones – A framework for second-best energy and climate policy adjustments","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Climate Change Policy and Economics","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":20,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa","funders":"Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden-Württemberg; Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung; Robert Bosch Stiftung; Bundesministerium für Forschung und Technologie; Niedersächsische Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur; European Commission; Volkswagen Foundation; World Bank Group; Colorado School of Mines; Fritz Thyssen Stiftung; Stiftelsen för Miljöstrategisk Forskning; Göteborgs Universitet; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency","keywords":"Subsidy; Economics; Portfolio; Carbon tax; Electricity; Best practice; Energy policy; Public economics; Market failure; Climate policy; Efficient energy use; Microeconomics; Environmental economics; Climate change; Renewable energy; Financial economics; Market economy","score_opus":0.10127990145132566,"score_gpt":0.29562666665301673,"score_spread":0.19434676520169109,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3210631855","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":[0.9713233,0.005596069,0.0025975276,0.012721985,0.0014698696,0.00012578105,0.0015396139,0.000018396457,0.0046074605],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9516915,0.027690308,0.011874277,0.0045411577,0.0029929867,0.000037304348,0.00007156123,0.00013996198,0.00096092967],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9975163,0.000020520105,0.0013957092,0.0003955348,0.000023616078,0.000648342],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99738276,0.00024507518,0.0015022111,0.00036767955,0.00013808861,0.00036416418],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0008673425,0.00027274786,0.0008801968,0.0006459227,0.00018012788,0.0003884369,0.00033230183,0.0002748338,0.00034703995],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004681732,0.00033006273,0.00035289617,0.0001925971,0.000100843965,0.00084102125,0.00018971696,0.00020555998,0.00003023415],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000039767136,0.00018139965,0.031585086,0.00009225098,0.0002647546,0.000008158465,0.0005448093,0.000028645116,0.000010244682,0.96405417,0.00043508757,0.00275566],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0030766684,0.00037600216,0.009609226,0.00008827926,0.000052813728,0.0006762138,0.0026957975,0.0024161548,0.00040997163,0.65283084,0.32689574,0.0008722914],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00007408667,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00041274965,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.32646066,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003603103,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00021464597,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999151},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3212225126","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104531","title":"Carbon taxes and footprint leakage: Spoilsport effects","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":9,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Profitability index; Carbon leakage; Economics; Carbon footprint; Carbon tax; Consumption (sociology); Competition (biology); Monetary economics; Market power; Microeconomics; Climate policy; Greenhouse gas","score_opus":0.021453482106960155,"score_gpt":0.1890987145282507,"score_spread":0.16764523242129054,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W3212225126","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":[0.974133,0.003998081,0.00037935757,0.0021346281,0.0010870476,0.000071540286,0.00002375406,0.000011062534,0.018161532],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99294573,0.00369397,0.0014883617,0.0003723972,0.00040300103,0.0000052584555,0.0000049336168,0.000049592156,0.0010367571],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99785876,0.00003478538,0.0013273817,0.00036291793,0.000028703005,0.00038742044],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9976473,0.0001217622,0.001466702,0.0004152783,0.000043454555,0.0003054901],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0013659252,0.00022892885,0.000790579,0.0003474746,0.000066023895,0.0002081781,0.0003016266,0.00016516216,0.0001310784],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00031831296,0.00028459338,0.00022131199,0.00010235377,0.00010181316,0.00042575167,0.0001778932,0.00033049102,0.00003689215],"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":[0.000016570104,0.00024614763,0.5291817,0.00009200817,0.00047762247,0.00009980039,0.00027445963,0.00054638984,0.00022241504,0.46111628,0.00030298316,0.0074235876],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0047163316,0.0004273615,0.536842,0.000067303496,0.00007319694,0.0011108465,0.00065956917,0.0021240495,0.0053868545,0.16497792,0.28228423,0.0013303509],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000448323,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00007820003,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.29613838,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0003854498,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00011175159,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999606},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4220717797","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104645","title":"Optimal tax policy and endogenous growth through innovation","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":19,"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":"Economics; Endogenous growth theory; Romer; Externality; Tax policy; Optimal tax; Welfare; Microeconomics; Capital (architecture); Growth model; Production (economics); Market power; Tax rate; Deadweight loss; Human capital; Monetary economics; Tax reform; Public economics; Monopoly; Market economy","score_opus":0.08549491583111783,"score_gpt":0.23500735670360073,"score_spread":0.1495124408724829,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4220717797","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":[0.8965986,0.00075369945,0.0009849293,0.011075221,0.0007320263,0.00011605401,0.00027967984,0.000014030777,0.08944581],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99479944,0.00022165723,0.0015435768,0.002168303,0.00092584465,0.000010525643,0.00001248638,0.000034593744,0.00028358813],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.997842,0.000035197638,0.0014410781,0.00025834006,0.000030590447,0.0003927537],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99788296,0.000083693565,0.0016469556,0.00019801254,0.00007226343,0.000116102136],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0016861234,0.00017053986,0.00052876695,0.0009387496,0.0002998797,0.00017558585,0.000423853,0.00007546544,0.00023438843],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00040745732,0.0002144963,0.00013963376,0.0004503082,0.00009068848,0.0011656157,0.00024410766,0.00040977795,0.000032779106],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000021725105,0.00008832794,0.011439826,0.000011904454,0.00010609456,0.000004960493,0.000603939,0.00030226834,0.000013687326,0.9846702,0.002149471,0.0005875933],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0015320171,0.00042469098,0.004380531,0.000002684493,0.000008717266,0.0008247542,0.0005108837,0.0011009463,0.000077010925,0.7597743,0.23099908,0.00036435295],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013599802,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000046481855,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.22884962,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00062632834,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00020948732,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.8746905},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4220829270","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104632","title":"Cash on the table? Imperfect take-up of tax incentives and firm investment behavior","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corporate Taxation and Avoidance","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":35,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto; University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Taxable income; Investment (military); Monetary economics; Tax credit; Depreciation (economics); Tax reform; Sophistication; Stylized fact; Public economics; Business; Microeconomics; Macroeconomics; Accounting","score_opus":0.039143033104837896,"score_gpt":0.2157908216805965,"score_spread":0.17664778857575858,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4220829270","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":[0.9931921,0.00010972098,0.000008891979,0.0035105988,0.0005074031,0.00011871522,0.000011168451,0.0000045456477,0.0025368629],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99706703,0.00005289316,0.00002190321,0.00218239,0.00025063858,0.000010241188,0.0000037653465,0.000009708635,0.00040139636],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9993098,0.000025598807,0.00036002032,0.000089369,0.000099961966,0.00011524975],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9984405,0.00005670406,0.0012667525,0.00011319829,0.00010634791,0.000016495467],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00096970063,0.00008378483,0.00016376073,0.00018094237,0.00019155187,0.00019288862,0.00022098958,0.00001610874,0.00048560844],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000098276185,0.00006417878,0.00006132253,0.00016402961,0.000051630148,0.0006789502,0.00016700814,0.00018021071,0.0000044583217],"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":[0.00018676675,0.0008593844,0.39453572,0.00010934194,0.00022810958,0.000026612854,0.0005657712,0.0011545831,0.00176227,0.50002426,0.07070357,0.029843628],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002310962,0.00021677554,0.18139414,0.000034608664,0.00011813584,0.00005559421,0.0049553476,0.0032970016,0.00034253506,0.0068708435,0.8000343,0.00036978323],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000471539,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000049553615,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7293307,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007706089,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00007637993,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.53170717},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4226226974","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104560","title":"Environmental taxes and productivity: Lessons from Canadian manufacturing","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":74,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Policy Research Center, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Productivity; Economics; Revenue; Dividend; Tax revenue; Natural resource economics; Investment (military); Production (economics); Monetary economics; Public economics; Labour economics; Agricultural economics; Macroeconomics; Finance","score_opus":0.0405431853224625,"score_gpt":0.19985104520366517,"score_spread":0.15930785988120266,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4226226974","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":[0.9678694,0.0016386331,0.00007348,0.01574763,0.000618554,0.000039901748,0.00064864417,0.0000039883935,0.013359743],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99753284,0.0004196477,0.0005246411,0.0005963027,0.0006353771,0.0000014506958,0.000014125957,0.000022369139,0.00025323825],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99865,0.00001957882,0.0006908481,0.00029466432,0.000014168419,0.000330721],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99877936,0.00005411057,0.0005412311,0.00022801112,0.000009546842,0.0003877657],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005399909,0.00014157758,0.0004419886,0.00027608822,0.000117208605,0.00022745621,0.0001918341,0.00010840462,0.00035437936],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00010312579,0.00017593511,0.00012475673,0.0000329029,0.000075062606,0.0008344517,0.000075252596,0.00024947358,0.0000877605],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.000023225533,0.0002886651,0.53055507,0.000037427984,0.0009562917,0.00011430722,0.0013597998,0.00011349148,0.00015162496,0.4065169,0.0052202493,0.05466295],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0007969486,0.000045123485,0.3112383,0.00001012006,0.000015637137,0.00021423498,0.00042020163,0.00026413353,0.0020643217,0.41296008,0.27158362,0.00038727772],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0028508317,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.012192568,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.26636338,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00038675123,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00015278139,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7174426},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4226443792","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104621","title":"Reexamining the evidence on gun ownership and homicide using proxy measures of ownership","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Gun Ownership and Violence Research","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":14,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Université de Montréal","funders":"","keywords":"Homicide; Proxy (statistics); Econometrics; Poison control; Statistics; Economics; Upper and lower bounds; Regression; Demographic economics; Injury prevention; Actuarial science; Mathematics; Medicine","score_opus":0.3942550777987341,"score_gpt":0.383563824107919,"score_spread":0.010691253690815083,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4226443792","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":[0.9845178,0.0007928225,0.000039576746,0.012304161,0.00032325124,0.000158053,0.0000030708302,0.00000545441,0.0018558169],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9982554,0.0008209568,0.00016520832,0.00022382599,0.00036051782,0.0000038596067,2.2742074e-7,0.0000115355815,0.00015851778],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","domain_scores_codex":[0.99723274,0.0011890343,0.000511229,0.00016041593,0.00050871214,0.00039785117],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9973903,0.0012438782,0.0007416357,0.00019836328,0.00022863482,0.00019724677],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.015554915,0.00009950893,0.00025891373,0.0002891332,0.0007544724,0.00021005211,0.0008246466,0.000057465157,0.00013470244],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0027405743,0.00006866707,0.000116730815,0.0002937264,0.00042195275,0.0006297696,0.00015002888,0.00059154973,0.0000010921909],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.0005609282,0.00031405696,0.71216327,0.0000842105,0.0003109381,0.000032381413,0.054655086,0.0032973685,0.001870813,0.094543904,0.0018094432,0.13035758],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0035664525,0.004675262,0.10304052,0.0012949256,0.00032305127,0.00042234542,0.66228855,0.01366921,0.002564425,0.034160227,0.17237698,0.0016180918],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00032354417,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00020926724,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.60912275,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0004711601,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0012688574,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5802868},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4283776623","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104703","title":"Limited supply and lagging enrollment: Production technologies and enrollment changes at community colleges during the pandemic","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":10,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Smith Richardson Foundation","keywords":"Lagging; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Unemployment; Demographic economics; Pandemic; Quarter (Canadian coin); Economics; Production (economics); Labour economics; Drop out; Business; Economic growth; Medicine; Geography","score_opus":0.06214158369366038,"score_gpt":0.23439556395057368,"score_spread":0.1722539802569133,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4283776623","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":[0.9684755,0.0047294623,0.000012569652,0.0258304,0.00044775344,0.00023881822,0.000074221556,0.000039976796,0.00015127425],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9910045,0.007919543,0.00007687547,0.00048362836,0.00009769128,0.000026034659,0.0000035964906,0.000021287493,0.00036682116],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99865896,0.000115039526,0.0006543222,0.00021264705,0.000045948855,0.00031310265],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9981538,0.00026952717,0.0011205615,0.00033903023,0.00003713842,0.00007996579],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003528304,0.0001634878,0.00042497195,0.0005739847,0.0010338497,0.00015753145,0.00039902423,0.0000740426,0.000058458136],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00060070306,0.00015585018,0.00006516462,0.00020910837,0.0001608668,0.00041191242,0.00078433723,0.0007082994,0.0000022374606],"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":[0.00011615698,0.00012946651,0.979433,0.00008707566,0.0002741976,0.0000043967952,0.0039012043,0.0008671701,0.00051724486,0.0046899766,0.0008638195,0.009116311],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.005555672,0.0010647997,0.48012745,0.000060833765,0.00007008132,0.0023322883,0.029502718,0.0020176372,0.0010152571,0.023468586,0.45380142,0.0009832507],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00006664196,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00026093336,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.49930555,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0012258939,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000064069915,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.795164},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4317938259","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104819","title":"Political accountability for populist policies: Lessons from the world’s largest democracy","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Media Influence and Politics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":8,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Indian Statistical Institute; Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia; Australian National University; Canadian Aeronautics and Space Institute; International Fine Particle Research Institute; University of New South Wales; Williams College","keywords":"Economics; Leverage (statistics); Regression discontinuity design; Voting; Politics; Accountability; Democracy; Legislature; Currency; Cash; Economic policy; Political economy; Monetary economics; Development economics; Finance; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.14798281038099584,"score_gpt":0.41683101093145514,"score_spread":0.2688482005504593,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4317938259","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":[0.72266996,0.000034211633,0.00003489929,0.26256162,0.00094052404,0.00014577889,0.00015397588,0.000023645314,0.013435394],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9884893,0.0001448231,0.00024487777,0.0056404793,0.004449049,0.000007830771,0.00001510223,0.000015143076,0.0009933965],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9982595,0.00016900606,0.0005747028,0.00012227002,0.00016707405,0.00070743554],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9958035,0.0029075972,0.0003380678,0.00022667191,0.0003062965,0.00041789137],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0031904562,0.00010031406,0.00025763825,0.00013618408,0.0006118592,0.00038211315,0.00073622644,0.00009866006,0.00016853189],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0036073986,0.0000772176,0.00021560867,0.00027175058,0.00037826912,0.0006337183,0.00006029942,0.0002603957,0.000056199046],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","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":[0.0000052933083,0.000027953825,0.09479292,0.0000033899973,0.00003349322,8.0293717e-7,0.0018307504,0.000005583869,0.0000012120088,0.86530703,0.037209947,0.00078162446],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00025087138,0.000019463949,0.04159085,0.000009640952,0.00002599301,0.0000018835049,0.010549903,0.0000621736,0.000009381866,0.21401022,0.7333712,0.00009842509],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0029894637,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0185971,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.69616127,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00037577434,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0012227504,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.999311},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4319301222","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104823","title":"Hierarchy and Information","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":18,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Hierarchy; Bureaucracy; Set (abstract data type); Government (linguistics); Quarter (Canadian coin); Benchmark (surveying); Economics; Public economics; Public administration; Business; Public relations; Political science; Computer science; Politics; Law","score_opus":0.028698062557552254,"score_gpt":0.26499815953255057,"score_spread":0.23630009697499832,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4319301222","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":[0.9699734,0.00003038959,0.0007937324,0.0119898245,0.00040973004,0.000036574693,0.0000023518446,0.000012356765,0.01675167],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9936285,0.0053533018,0.0001136158,0.00044333827,0.00018946991,4.0432784e-7,0.0000021673723,0.0000018112976,0.00026738114],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9996076,0.000022104978,0.00017918836,0.000019849856,0.00007502382,0.000096217045],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99963933,0.00003338181,0.00017867835,0.00002423835,0.0000577215,0.00006667636],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0008195907,0.000021354776,0.000053494216,0.00008968082,0.00008715563,0.00013912993,0.00006617153,0.0000293926,0.000028914172],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00021714102,0.000020216894,0.000019764651,0.00012628351,0.000038117505,0.0025997262,0.000013368041,0.00003725414,0.00002428911],"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":[0.000006460301,0.000009994361,0.04544963,0.0000052332807,0.000014100002,9.897715e-7,0.00455345,0.0001177234,0.0000021497106,0.822577,0.014050332,0.113212936],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00018315771,0.000019781037,0.025506796,0.0000028704858,0.0000021867102,0.0000016068177,0.0018263904,0.0003445072,0.0000054215607,0.008298869,0.963776,0.00003244223],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000016731185,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000039493076,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.9497256,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000079741985,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00013492795,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.18847387},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4381059875","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104896","title":"The effects of labor market opportunities on education: The case of a female hiring ceiling in Iran","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Labor market dynamics and wage inequality","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":11,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Calgary; University of Regina","funders":"","keywords":"Spillover effect; Regression discontinuity design; Economics; Labour economics; Limiting; Private sector; Attendance; Demographic economics; Public sector; Economic growth; Medicine","score_opus":0.07165292182466929,"score_gpt":0.2651408401191477,"score_spread":0.1934879182944784,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4381059875","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":[0.99006915,0.000665528,0.000014776705,0.0032572993,0.0010798766,0.00012696227,0.000063045794,0.0000038163075,0.004719553],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.995438,0.0036868178,0.000047278987,0.000148058,0.00014606354,0.000007627379,0.0000019324943,0.000015657675,0.00050857745],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99832433,0.00009276581,0.0012287243,0.000120717654,0.000026990389,0.00020646684],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99678254,0.0012780945,0.0014424869,0.0003279108,0.00010295335,0.000066025124],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0050269435,0.00010480132,0.00038567558,0.00038123515,0.000098414544,0.000093749026,0.0003736013,0.000060912134,0.00003174565],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0010545856,0.00007983721,0.00015126928,0.00030705353,0.00009110117,0.0002502915,0.00006858707,0.00021498065,0.0000034122277],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000057198333,0.0001916279,0.091234244,0.0002411229,0.000155631,0.000056154448,0.0011466752,0.00032230545,0.0000061371247,0.8834984,0.00056549057,0.022525068],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0034128493,0.000788441,0.40478796,0.0005198884,0.00005309044,0.0003647691,0.022481496,0.016870638,0.00025229147,0.47807458,0.07161026,0.00078375556],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00012488932,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00026229036,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.40542376,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00012889213,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00019684112,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.32556668},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4386062825","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104971","title":"Pass-through of subsidies to prices under limited competition: Evidence from Canada’s Nutrition North program","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies","field":"Energy","cited_by":15,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"Toronto Metropolitan University; University of Toronto","funders":"Faculty of Arts, Ryerson University; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Toronto Metropolitan University","keywords":"Monopoly; Competition (biology); Economics; Duopoly; Subsidy; Market power; Liberian dollar; Indigenous; Marginal cost; Microeconomics; Market economy; Cournot competition; Finance","score_opus":0.05376114917602617,"score_gpt":0.2569328111306964,"score_spread":0.2031716619546702,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4386062825","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":[0.9905776,0.00024008527,0.00024709187,0.007988625,0.0003044859,0.00008922507,0.000070576956,0.000026075197,0.00045628063],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99377245,0.003664448,0.001649232,0.0004354586,0.00025713243,0.000015306801,0.00010700583,0.0000173888,0.000081552585],"study_design_codex":"simulation_or_modeling","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.998819,0.000037546946,0.00065172365,0.0001324127,0.00015282845,0.00020649788],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988639,0.00019646849,0.0005202581,0.00016217376,0.00012367096,0.0001335821],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0001610279,0.00011897784,0.0002756265,0.00014960983,0.000064692154,0.00005465993,0.00021963811,0.000051667797,0.000114572336],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000050738425,0.00011864486,0.00009187606,0.0002300804,0.000055686305,0.0005942063,0.00001813729,0.000100549,0.000009169542],"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":[0.00021101296,0.0011011781,0.33418584,0.00029617143,0.0014652401,0.00006045253,0.0043707276,0.4608378,0.0009296721,0.17147012,0.014809669,0.010262117],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0005945052,0.00019421714,0.8618691,0.00011631183,0.000052671312,0.0000055431483,0.0016417851,0.0002542782,0.0012963336,0.0032449933,0.13053022,0.00020005397],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.11370688,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.82144463,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.70773774,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002005094,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00029555956,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.89219505},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4391830736","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.105035","title":"Courts, Crime and Economic Performance: Evidence from a Judicial Reform in Kenya","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Law, Economics, and Judicial Systems","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":7,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"McGill University; Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on Organizations","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Economics; Judicial reform; Economic reform; Public economics; Political science; Law; Politics","score_opus":0.051592226397818845,"score_gpt":0.24123297347746764,"score_spread":0.18964074707964879,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4391830736","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":[0.958305,0.015449275,0.00016724464,0.0021148347,0.0042497865,0.00016546568,0.00014570962,0.000025331728,0.019377325],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.980414,0.016800618,0.00025012853,0.00019261912,0.0021418242,0.000007822495,0.0000068504246,0.000052569678,0.00013360594],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9965678,0.00003231775,0.0023672157,0.0005169049,0.000033704902,0.0004820876],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9981384,0.00020404029,0.0010258014,0.0003187443,0.00004041813,0.00027256456],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0030076925,0.00024148075,0.001036373,0.00084216095,0.00009258373,0.000687963,0.00050344283,0.00024431187,0.0003999698],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000116165334,0.0003086157,0.00023854489,0.00010851213,0.00018579215,0.0029315392,0.00012524737,0.00046261252,0.00042190248],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.00013190151,0.00011627445,0.3692806,0.00018590673,0.0005572865,0.000051236406,0.0021367886,0.00048259392,0.000015532132,0.6043267,0.0027890007,0.019926172],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0032835747,0.00084883475,0.3434863,0.001090944,0.00008047203,0.00038278342,0.001235225,0.0810087,0.0001367451,0.3999226,0.16671371,0.0018100722],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0025560022,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0008826216,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.20440407,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0022474297,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00038011972,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999366},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4396218010","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105098","title":"Energy efficiency can deliver for climate policy: Evidence from machine learning-based targeting","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies","field":"Energy","cited_by":15,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Calgary","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Energy (signal processing); Climate policy; Efficient energy use; Environmental economics; Public economics; Climate change; Natural resource economics; Engineering; Physics","score_opus":0.022383273144342956,"score_gpt":0.24464201656918477,"score_spread":0.2222587434248418,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4396218010","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":[0.945635,0.00649149,0.03705651,0.008624366,0.000963828,0.00006813149,0.00020116725,0.00008834808,0.00087116234],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9930633,0.003675263,0.0014122876,0.00064601784,0.00081549614,0.0000073744686,0.000085123116,0.00005049807,0.00024465861],"study_design_codex":"simulation_or_modeling","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.998534,0.000068847694,0.00070438854,0.00021420971,0.00010916785,0.00036933343],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99870574,0.0005087417,0.00039785577,0.00013269577,0.00006932358,0.0001856163],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00064057356,0.00018030978,0.00027992757,0.00036159842,0.00014073502,0.00020081678,0.00027039865,0.000092246846,0.00018831195],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00017990985,0.00016652455,0.00026374924,0.00013285528,0.00006535791,0.00044434276,0.00001864793,0.00019941367,0.000007819864],"study_design_candidate":"simulation_or_modeling","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":[0.000065938875,0.00009516083,0.009071468,0.000083020685,0.0002671719,0.000018791605,0.00078264985,0.8769836,0.0011107143,0.096830465,0.00043776404,0.014253296],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012020923,0.00036478436,0.0037887683,0.000186817,0.00015792227,0.000014537798,0.00025410054,0.42959216,0.0046978374,0.005490905,0.5537407,0.0005094109],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0037619176,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0026967875,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5533029,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002670953,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00028516367,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6790674},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4400079830","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105167","title":"Job displacement costs of phasing out coal","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Employment and Welfare Studies","field":"Health Professions","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":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"Svenska Handelsbankens Forskningsstiftelse; Office for National Statistics","keywords":"Economics; Coal; Displacement (psychology); Phaser; Labour economics; Microeconomics; Physics; Engineering; Psychology","score_opus":0.10877585771911226,"score_gpt":0.4198637693558155,"score_spread":0.31108791163670324,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4400079830","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":[0.95240235,0.0017893482,0.000892009,0.01952721,0.0046993657,0.00016583446,0.000025724445,0.000018291154,0.02047987],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9949295,0.0010450481,0.00013865571,0.00030521958,0.00089981005,0.000004298965,0.0000026560813,0.000018949868,0.0026558735],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9985316,0.00011712642,0.00090972695,0.0000918749,0.00008914748,0.0002605156],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988198,0.0003521809,0.00045370683,0.00010152191,0.00016406256,0.00010870305],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0015082953,0.00009771014,0.0003178008,0.00019742208,0.00017116178,0.000032933145,0.00015323692,0.00007133334,0.00030024222],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00011303512,0.000077811186,0.00013476245,0.000049712446,0.00004644477,0.0003731743,0.00009545163,0.0003702835,0.000047813362],"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":[0.0001250525,0.00018163647,0.6468888,0.0005825771,0.0012856389,0.000025502246,0.009303097,0.00004915814,0.00020666396,0.13755648,0.17219454,0.03160084],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0021771672,0.00046717052,0.031306334,0.0010999324,0.00016085892,0.000020191628,0.008552135,0.00060127245,0.000091065136,0.0045206826,0.95071656,0.00028663644],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000021108399,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00020365101,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.778522,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0004279776,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0004147391,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.32874417},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4400842697","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105172","title":"Coordinated selection of collective action: Wealthy-interest bias and inequality","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Political Influence and Corporate Strategies","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":6,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Queen's University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Masarykova Univerzita; Akademie Věd České Republiky; Labex; Cardiff University; Grantová Agentura České Republiky; Queen's University; Università degli Studi G. d'Annunzio Chieti - Pescara; Scuola IMT Alti Studi Lucca; Università Ca' Foscari Venezia","keywords":"Economics; Inequality; Collective action; Selection (genetic algorithm); Selection bias; Action (physics); Microeconomics; Public economics; Mathematics; Political science; Computer science; Physics","score_opus":0.20579915655305012,"score_gpt":0.3132004237270262,"score_spread":0.1074012671739761,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4400842697","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":[0.9903824,0.000102819795,0.00023924664,0.0026247283,0.00048249686,0.000044025594,0.0000029751666,0.000018784536,0.0061025703],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99880844,0.000068765425,0.000028096625,0.00027983068,0.0006660634,0.0000010479112,0.0000016205512,0.0000075966786,0.00013854702],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99927545,0.000016056016,0.0004421228,0.00009122123,0.000040122948,0.00013502114],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99917084,0.00007164911,0.00037848562,0.000044418313,0.00031131285,0.000023289282],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006588216,0.00008000639,0.00019812779,0.00033087254,0.000054609245,0.0004810408,0.00008268498,0.000053830532,0.000087808075],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00013171473,0.000069359376,0.00006251777,0.00031080705,0.00006694795,0.0022528165,0.000032579806,0.00016901575,0.000010046449],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000109414665,0.000111038666,0.060950056,0.000566516,0.00029352691,0.000011647701,0.000073257776,0.00008213776,0.00059543946,0.91676897,0.005490151,0.014947859],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0019096235,0.00053281646,0.18323426,0.00046256447,0.00030964092,0.00029128362,0.0053008553,0.035749547,0.0021055632,0.6199193,0.14942543,0.0007590945],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00012315201,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00018151732,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.29684964,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000105576946,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002599144,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.46386874},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4401507799","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105194","title":"Estimating intergenerational health transmission in Taiwan with administrative health records","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Health disparities and outcomes","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":9,"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":"Tinbergen Institute; National Taiwan University of Science and Technology; National Science and Technology Council; Adelphi University; Universität Hohenheim; Agricultural and Applied Economics Association; Research Institute, Georgia Institute of Technology","keywords":"Economics; Transmission (telecommunications); Public economics; Telecommunications; Computer science","score_opus":0.08965261406990453,"score_gpt":0.3979211158242909,"score_spread":0.30826850175438636,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4401507799","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":[0.19869107,0.00267766,0.0228707,0.77006155,0.0021869713,0.00024398112,0.00001877476,0.00002629305,0.0032230134],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.95814216,0.0012365659,0.034380008,0.004657876,0.0011348753,0.0000044849335,0.0000066239545,0.000016760576,0.00042066982],"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9984122,0.00024765372,0.00075166434,0.000116075935,0.00012689643,0.00034549608],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990295,0.00012459783,0.00032476158,0.000046169174,0.00006645208,0.0004085035],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0036815782,0.0000790493,0.0002725555,0.0001991731,0.00024381692,0.00026751732,0.00013961029,0.00004545698,0.00015833594],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00010116976,0.00006468369,0.00006215234,0.00016612235,0.000059255326,0.00069165166,0.0000073238675,0.0002888626,0.000002069799],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","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":[0.000057933605,0.0001652603,0.03415251,0.0005147434,0.000084979874,0.000027235275,0.05629606,0.0014872815,3.605763e-7,0.30989122,0.019014448,0.578308],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010699658,0.0014240119,0.018065957,0.0016856213,0.000007945811,0.000105462226,0.034772247,0.025598561,0.0000030327483,0.00986197,0.907038,0.00036723143],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0010327562,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.022386394,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.88802356,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0009912045,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.010387448,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9954525},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4404111751","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105216","title":"The value of electricity reliability: Evidence from battery adoption","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies","field":"Energy","cited_by":10,"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; University of Alberta","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Reliability (semiconductor); Value (mathematics); Electricity; Battery (electricity); Econometrics; Microeconomics; Actuarial science; Engineering; Mathematics; Electrical engineering; Statistics; Power (physics); Physics","score_opus":0.023414712668689563,"score_gpt":0.23618080651592946,"score_spread":0.2127660938472399,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4404111751","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":[0.9896118,0.0023425098,0.0022499023,0.004166876,0.00063089683,0.000028404405,0.0000097639395,0.000012000857,0.00094781443],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9897463,0.009138388,0.00042207772,0.00014138372,0.0003294367,0.000001915618,0.000003941848,0.0000142127965,0.00020237357],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99886626,0.000085925225,0.0006718573,0.000115942064,0.00010915978,0.00015083463],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986007,0.00071934296,0.00034609585,0.00020789875,0.000054563145,0.000071353556],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.000972796,0.0000904424,0.00018093968,0.000105556996,0.00006037394,0.00011254812,0.0002461419,0.00006553489,0.00010183117],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00016508577,0.0000664238,0.00017186643,0.00010011723,0.000085123895,0.000660134,0.0000127058665,0.00019573697,0.000011909606],"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":[0.00013026364,0.00021925633,0.064996585,0.00011274616,0.00091236655,0.000014982453,0.0017052536,0.2683468,0.0040630484,0.5688566,0.0028531537,0.08778897],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00075804384,0.0004356166,0.4422394,0.0003245785,0.00033448165,0.00004473476,0.00080010545,0.028237725,0.014150005,0.11796766,0.3942245,0.00048316302],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00043832074,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0003235294,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.45088893,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00016074604,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001418245,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.27086842},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4404736921","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105249","title":"Laffer’s day in court: The revenue effects of criminal justice fees and fines","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Law, Economics, and Judicial Systems","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Laffer curve; Economics; Revenue; Criminal justice; Economic Justice; Tax revenue; Criminal court; Monetary economics; Public economics; Law; Tax reform; Political science; Microeconomics; Gross income; State income tax; International law; Finance","score_opus":0.03462839435981205,"score_gpt":0.23330528921540974,"score_spread":0.1986768948555977,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4404736921","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":[0.973639,0.014952499,0.0004137321,0.0030647884,0.0034229928,0.00016036033,0.0000833284,0.0000065155386,0.0042567705],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9941362,0.004419156,0.00010156866,0.0001887227,0.00091041386,0.0000052001255,0.000001672401,0.000025330135,0.00021169454],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.99817246,0.000053309326,0.0012943763,0.00021281396,0.000023670898,0.00024337004],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9982609,0.00058705866,0.0008047111,0.0002003367,0.00004662144,0.00010032945],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002621071,0.00013059085,0.0006374,0.00040606252,0.000062778425,0.00024072778,0.00033506053,0.000113294984,0.000038657377],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00048407106,0.00013346889,0.0001616888,0.00012987547,0.00016507368,0.00060415856,0.000065166605,0.0002669522,0.000029827015],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.000030727788,0.0001395537,0.04909742,0.0014037064,0.00035017644,0.00004334742,0.004374185,0.0002537711,0.00003105204,0.927548,0.007626043,0.009102041],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.003901715,0.0009817586,0.15766786,0.001104131,0.00044827638,0.00058845844,0.0035232713,0.016730325,0.00034904818,0.4735938,0.33986008,0.001251273],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001870913,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00031855187,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.4539542,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00016396087,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000105215026,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5442703},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4406105356","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105275","title":"Correlation in state and local tax changes","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Local Government Finance and Decentralization","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":9,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Semtech (Canada)","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Correlation; State (computer science); Econometrics; Mathematics","score_opus":0.01881011304576404,"score_gpt":0.2630370515054842,"score_spread":0.24422693845972013,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4406105356","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":[0.9163252,0.00037270665,0.050839264,0.01866031,0.0006372721,0.00007649696,0.0000025140491,0.000003027383,0.013083178],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99495727,0.0031993445,0.00008036902,0.0003430032,0.000050732626,4.8954644e-7,4.192082e-7,0.0000015417111,0.0013668381],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99958867,0.000041184212,0.00017786273,0.000043719247,0.000050161198,0.00009840003],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9996865,0.000043838118,0.00016419528,0.000025144367,0.000042043717,0.00003831925],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006863952,0.00002876334,0.00008193322,0.00009597631,0.0000488161,0.00007138926,0.000059966722,0.000037647438,0.000025231013],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00010360199,0.000028531042,0.000013575058,0.000106275824,0.000059582566,0.0003827714,0.000012414406,0.00005964423,0.0000017007096],"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":[0.00002807101,0.0000599955,0.3521937,0.000009333549,0.0000192089,0.000003041943,0.0029872037,0.002458493,0.0000035593891,0.33334643,0.0035104104,0.30538052],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0013555973,0.00008982099,0.15999232,0.00006406225,0.000012343828,0.0000026131097,0.006362855,0.006666258,0.000042640746,0.05978978,0.7654803,0.00014141461],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00013458505,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.006840923,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.76196986,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00023761368,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00018859709,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.38173953},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4408872520","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2026.105700","title":"Are Elites Meritocratic and Efficiency-Seeking? Evidence from MBA Students","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corruption and Economic Development","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"Cornell University","keywords":"Meritocracy; Psychology; Political science; Social psychology; Mathematics education; Sociology; Law","score_opus":0.05602793269263981,"score_gpt":0.3385661852235649,"score_spread":0.2825382525309251,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4408872520","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":[0.98522043,0.0009404827,0.00049666374,0.008689946,0.0010882303,0.00008339765,0.0000022972836,0.000009293451,0.0034692571],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9946737,0.0025233426,0.0006032643,0.00085504237,0.00017536066,0.0000024003007,3.4238244e-7,0.000004146338,0.0011623905],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.99895185,0.00009381578,0.0005185778,0.0001414729,0.00010280904,0.0001914731],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987064,0.0003353186,0.0005915008,0.00009993025,0.000113584705,0.00015324364],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0018622888,0.000080530575,0.00024074083,0.00019105738,0.00023681375,0.00054545177,0.00044121937,0.000059063394,0.00021749141],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00089982664,0.000080896505,0.00006318057,0.00010869512,0.0001146587,0.0006486154,0.00010313947,0.00012526658,0.000017178174],"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":[0.000012957938,0.00007475695,0.9573208,0.000008661397,0.00009252871,0.000003446344,0.0035084945,0.000026964444,0.000021452308,0.003992066,0.0011272467,0.033810627],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00075026357,0.000038362166,0.74268633,0.00031067475,0.000041520274,0.0000042491474,0.01650328,0.00047844302,0.000016625912,0.0047179726,0.2342091,0.00024317756],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001501341,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0014855609,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.23308186,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00037081566,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00053338084,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5259804},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4409578397","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105358","title":"The employment effects of a pandemic wage subsidy","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Employment and Welfare Studies","field":"Health Professions","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"Statistics Canada; University of Toronto","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Subsidy; Economics; Wage; Labour economics; Pandemic; Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Market economy; Medicine","score_opus":0.04816622999318653,"score_gpt":0.3807771545679984,"score_spread":0.33261092457481184,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4409578397","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":[0.9737624,0.0022420248,0.00012830927,0.01472862,0.002329292,0.0002785127,0.000002650758,0.000011317182,0.0065168953],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98942125,0.004482375,0.00003599873,0.0007337397,0.00026752576,0.000019161198,6.781246e-7,0.000010877778,0.005028368],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9983509,0.00025921845,0.00093660265,0.00008061046,0.000071416405,0.0003012423],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99688053,0.0017878114,0.0008284958,0.00019327788,0.00024122327,0.0000686453],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0018367787,0.0001012239,0.0003499723,0.00014694061,0.00047449095,0.000017663684,0.00031705754,0.000085821965,0.000024349862],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005363281,0.00006394009,0.00014910688,0.000103548366,0.00007820543,0.00015174007,0.00015151611,0.00039929902,0.00000923843],"study_design_candidate":"observational","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":[0.000055591532,0.00007634512,0.90375566,0.00014628771,0.0005321731,0.000002072745,0.0011901914,0.0000041574676,0.000079759644,0.04246294,0.03435962,0.017335169],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0031261297,0.00030884525,0.4529997,0.00043699815,0.00014109668,0.0000036049023,0.004064433,0.000028930603,0.00019862303,0.015890297,0.5226392,0.00016213101],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000029244995,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00033265402,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.48827958,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00023044473,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00046347498,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.36494488},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4410106424","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105372","title":"Present bias in politics and self-committing treaties","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"International Development and Aid","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"European Research Council; Simon Fraser University; Engineering Research Centers","keywords":"Politics; Economics; Positive economics; Neoclassical economics; Political science; Law","score_opus":0.04859096710523755,"score_gpt":0.3076419216920918,"score_spread":0.2590509545868543,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4410106424","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":[0.8614339,0.00011652796,0.000017534148,0.020613175,0.00033130622,0.00002909198,7.181917e-7,0.0000040993073,0.1174536],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99521345,0.00062661775,0.0008013227,0.00019880664,0.00018516212,5.8474257e-7,3.2516292e-7,0.000002023579,0.0029717186],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9994419,0.000057681485,0.00028311016,0.000042070107,0.00005425466,0.00012097115],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99949557,0.00018761514,0.00015256714,0.000025344727,0.000093349685,0.000045582652],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0010096767,0.00003735378,0.0001001732,0.00023686116,0.0000928852,0.0001544971,0.00012844715,0.00003480632,0.00001902669],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00025385252,0.000035702313,0.000028910901,0.000066983186,0.000043359363,0.00035035843,0.000029522678,0.000081078004,0.000001105516],"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":[0.0000013277659,0.00003589783,0.26030067,0.0000040306604,0.000032923734,0.0000013619806,0.002892977,0.0000102209,3.7332333e-7,0.73281115,0.0009416948,0.0029673856],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00076197635,0.00003221665,0.17088608,0.00006354267,0.000012239027,0.0000051528104,0.010453226,0.00062767643,0.000051883024,0.11458142,0.7023934,0.00013119307],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00019533536,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0006937946,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7014517,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00022797425,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00044250485,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.14898191},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4410865135","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105380","title":"The value of group purchasing: Evidence from the U.S. hospital industry","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Supply Chain and Inventory Management","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Alberta","funders":"","keywords":"Economics; Value (mathematics); Value-Based Purchasing; Purchasing; Group (periodic table); Microeconomics; Actuarial science; Operations management; Statistics; Mathematics","score_opus":0.030659572102231487,"score_gpt":0.23238373833457432,"score_spread":0.20172416623234282,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4410865135","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":[0.92521954,0.0012447385,0.00048221307,0.06366652,0.002790119,0.00014912851,0.000001551387,0.000009184632,0.006437015],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9951124,0.00036489152,0.0000791418,0.0026461312,0.001501718,0.000003340278,0.0000016156503,0.0000098536,0.0002808785],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9989471,0.000029910783,0.00059674325,0.0001125293,0.00012521204,0.00018850784],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9982989,0.00035630396,0.0008643409,0.00029876866,0.00016762185,0.000014097771],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0019747862,0.0001092782,0.00018831584,0.00013794783,0.00021097204,0.0006515142,0.0009886462,0.000080979444,0.000083001],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006634459,0.00006678794,0.00016091214,0.00021982033,0.00013404158,0.0014512658,0.0003247587,0.00036458136,0.000010324449],"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":[0.00005176816,0.00017872962,0.2896245,0.000054983786,0.0005368573,0.0000049198234,0.00017604785,0.0004583311,0.00002951842,0.53655607,0.12392835,0.048399944],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00062507123,0.000035780977,0.10986315,0.00022411023,0.00012243296,0.0000012892891,0.003637888,0.004862582,0.000028578754,0.036395025,0.8440489,0.00015515515],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00019028889,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000066928995,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7201206,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000090090165,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008599978,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6282567},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4411068397","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105404","title":"The sectoral origins of heterogeneous spending multipliers","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Monetary Policy and Economic Impact","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":3,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Fonds de Recherche du Québec-Société et Culture; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación; HEC Montréal; CY Cergy Paris Université; Lancaster University; National University of Singapore; European Central Bank; Fondation Banque de France; University of Maryland, Baltimore County","keywords":"Economics; Macroeconomics; Microeconomics; Neoclassical economics","score_opus":0.0884451495306387,"score_gpt":0.2542830500364626,"score_spread":0.16583790050582392,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4411068397","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":[0.9867131,0.0017836016,0.0013451849,0.0017768114,0.0019345928,0.00009165288,0.00006480729,0.0000061366404,0.0062840725],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99750745,0.0010822413,0.00048003957,0.00020611347,0.00023745999,0.0000015887496,0.0000019710867,0.000015471207,0.00046764876],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9978869,0.00002530624,0.0015327509,0.00017004967,0.000017516344,0.0003674525],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99775136,0.00021709432,0.0015386549,0.00033481236,0.000028593186,0.00012951145],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0016951119,0.00015170172,0.00056122616,0.00045108583,0.000157167,0.00016953485,0.00059834274,0.00009882284,0.00016070133],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002376385,0.00013883198,0.0003479381,0.00012309889,0.00012154801,0.0004793636,0.00007096182,0.00023203966,0.000048367474],"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":[0.0000943122,0.00012435959,0.26521543,0.000041750616,0.00087980396,0.0000047535764,0.000322321,0.021403383,0.000028396606,0.70254964,0.0026047085,0.006731182],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0029268193,0.00031266361,0.027724909,0.00004471291,0.000044958826,0.00013557001,0.0004062858,0.05448602,0.0009927676,0.11094079,0.80144155,0.000542961],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00014526835,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00007955783,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7988368,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0006083553,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00009220663,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.56614035},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4411407378","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105419","title":"Frames, incentives, and education: Effectiveness of interventions to delay public pension claiming","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":3,"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 Calgary; HEC Montréal","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Fonds de Recherche du Québec-Société et Culture; Social Science Research Council","keywords":"Incentive; Economics; Public economics; Psychological intervention; Pension; Public education; Actuarial science; Microeconomics; Psychology; Finance; Economic growth","score_opus":0.023965624539875968,"score_gpt":0.273858483846638,"score_spread":0.24989285930676206,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4411407378","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":[0.9934198,0.0005038876,0.001398805,0.0016997819,0.0008502708,0.00017764285,0.0000018442146,0.000007635388,0.001940297],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99783814,0.00006524494,0.0010393554,0.00055956515,0.00028113223,0.0000051337893,0.000015635287,0.000011493485,0.00018432656],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9985324,0.0000670078,0.0009275014,0.00019221782,0.000108251465,0.00017262057],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99759597,0.00014565136,0.0009758675,0.00020999959,0.0010376362,0.000034861496],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0024618765,0.0001363394,0.0004320486,0.0013564083,0.00013767816,0.00044357762,0.0003005947,0.00006825633,0.00012385391],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0009443512,0.00013128674,0.00025625547,0.00065295195,0.000050436647,0.0021042866,0.00027009376,0.00015633693,0.000011328044],"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":[0.000051953157,0.00029807378,0.8059731,0.0006007837,0.00007595174,0.0000013291057,0.000030651845,0.00005640834,0.00014468392,0.17291439,0.003556683,0.01629601],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0009128083,0.000057457528,0.88552046,0.0013702564,0.00027197666,0.000008738688,0.00043853032,0.0010626987,0.000097968754,0.019331444,0.09065283,0.00027485483],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00007524352,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00014072792,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.15358295,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001451501,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00024590458,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5353718},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4411871392","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105424","title":"Facilitating police reform: Body cameras, police-involved homicides, and law enforcement outcomes","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Criminal Law and Evidence","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":1,"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":"","keywords":"Law enforcement; Criminology; Enforcement; Political science; Law; Economics; Psychology","score_opus":0.049416228047314534,"score_gpt":0.3407960028178037,"score_spread":0.29137977477048915,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4411871392","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":[0.9066279,0.00027738337,0.00010429223,0.012188239,0.0004949636,0.00010156823,0.0000087732,0.000014403172,0.08018248],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9952122,0.0006318782,0.00065221515,0.0017871616,0.00019947886,0.0000020409782,0.0000012031279,0.0000060858133,0.0015077199],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99862534,0.000100609424,0.0006474812,0.00013739598,0.00012923706,0.00035994852],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986839,0.00034850833,0.00041485176,0.00013939077,0.00018182672,0.0002315137],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0019196852,0.00012376455,0.0003390256,0.00017686008,0.00045098024,0.0003559078,0.0003542556,0.000084989486,0.00006200631],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002198602,0.000110232504,0.00012735128,0.0001070779,0.0002561445,0.001073052,0.000090238864,0.00019858046,0.0000060733364],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","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":[0.00001758911,0.00003485924,0.024862494,0.0000304155,0.00011311903,9.54881e-7,0.010274181,0.000016055472,0.00003760484,0.95780385,0.0011162189,0.005692684],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0010984088,0.00017010739,0.010831043,0.00011848529,0.00010675822,0.000010952479,0.17549881,0.00021919791,0.00012908083,0.013317139,0.7981244,0.00037562865],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.12553191,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.080472074,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.9444867,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0007209634,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0005025071,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9363069},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4412739756","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105446","title":"Climate and migration in the United States","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":2,"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 British Columbia","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Economics; Climate change; Natural resource economics; Geology","score_opus":0.11174070211942624,"score_gpt":0.3241776683860919,"score_spread":0.21243696626666567,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4412739756","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":[0.9578527,0.00011770635,0.0001351453,0.039960682,0.00017201832,0.00007347607,0.000003523691,0.0000037642103,0.0016809637],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9887335,0.009729318,0.00020916031,0.001114943,0.00011459713,0.000002457032,0.000016997059,0.0000029151586,0.00007613602],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9993158,0.00016578603,0.0002941827,0.000049536415,0.00005680501,0.0001178995],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.999315,0.000241757,0.00023369657,0.00004888565,0.00013153523,0.000029109593],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0025250628,0.00004008474,0.00008280837,0.0003126594,0.00015370692,0.00026476363,0.00012944873,0.00004024985,0.000014232983],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00026884294,0.000032191816,0.000023808958,0.00027996645,0.00006577217,0.00051857834,0.000010711753,0.00008577528,0.0000011239607],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","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":[0.00003968824,0.00015255525,0.2793795,0.00003228504,0.000046230172,0.0000031498985,0.13882473,0.0010386603,0.000037928647,0.5446856,0.007320052,0.028439626],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00096497615,0.000084408864,0.16767974,0.0000581238,0.000033358574,0.0000075671896,0.25178912,0.012649931,0.000023335671,0.037101176,0.5294525,0.00015575676],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0007372281,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.058154516,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.52213246,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00015118608,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00013866447,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9590317},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4413046967","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105452","title":"Auctions for risk-averse non-profits","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Auction Theory and Applications","field":"Decision Sciences","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"National Science Foundation","keywords":"Common value auction; Economics; Microeconomics; Risk aversion (psychology); Financial economics; Expected utility hypothesis","score_opus":0.12313892802747599,"score_gpt":0.40331093914132776,"score_spread":0.28017201111385176,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4413046967","genre_codex":"methods","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":[0.42083922,0.000039308732,0.5533359,0.013456226,0.0019212419,0.00018201457,0.000056254292,0.000010373284,0.010159432],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.977828,0.00010433999,0.008074775,0.00046091445,0.00046220384,0.000018122577,0.0000016224449,0.00000745623,0.013042558],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9987232,0.000068098605,0.0008292463,0.00015161805,0.000094236944,0.00013359074],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9970449,0.00095227524,0.0009830432,0.00030324157,0.00060864043,0.00010785094],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0042774524,0.00006873976,0.00021209478,0.00047406225,0.0003089258,0.00025338534,0.0005824711,0.00006308152,0.00024568223],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0023594652,0.000055848162,0.00024398847,0.00037186075,0.00007362707,0.0006675617,0.000048583515,0.00015909414,0.00009604384],"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":[0.00004682806,0.00013161352,0.010084645,0.0000032276087,0.00014038812,2.8918288e-7,0.00016191055,0.0033909527,0.000059671263,0.7298556,0.12860642,0.12751845],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00042749877,0.00003328826,0.0038376595,0.0000029460064,0.00002287425,0.000012438823,0.0011006946,0.0027697373,0.00021090354,0.41551796,0.5760104,0.00005360731],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000001821785,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000015328,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.5569888,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000085666434,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003373514,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.28246707},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4414100595","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105477","title":"Measuring small business dynamics and employment with private-sector real-time data","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Firm Innovation and Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":2,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council","keywords":"Small business; Dynamics (music); Business cycle; Small open economy","score_opus":0.08889443679195132,"score_gpt":0.2234863745225541,"score_spread":0.1345919377306028,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4414100595","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":[0.96486384,0.0002719426,0.015253346,0.005904271,0.00044113546,0.00012567562,0.00016787513,0.00001853501,0.012953396],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9626699,0.0022365558,0.029382855,0.0011686345,0.00030403887,0.000006590553,0.00015825494,0.00007849862,0.003994662],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9985417,0.000013280483,0.0009264374,0.00027842954,0.000024521307,0.00021559338],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99833274,0.00005396599,0.0008839535,0.00046472382,0.00017431033,0.0000902915],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001321357,0.0001363746,0.00044498217,0.00049505057,0.0000839831,0.00038310292,0.00053699047,0.000082194405,0.00009675364],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00014848371,0.0001475302,0.000036558995,0.0003651877,0.000059294547,0.00073383586,0.00020587195,0.00017218808,0.000016876826],"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":[0.000055712728,0.00017160027,0.5237594,0.000086806576,0.0004933384,0.000007276665,0.0000648063,0.00025347067,0.000012662943,0.4646939,0.0019564412,0.008444538],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.004517326,0.0002383092,0.7423687,0.0001700049,0.00006596637,0.00013006474,0.00017372225,0.0972482,0.000035388315,0.03279747,0.12141486,0.00083996437],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001426205,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00062760425,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.43189645,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00033369337,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00016478144,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6016107},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4415544018","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105514","title":"Corrigendum to “Climate and migration in the United States”. [249 (2025) 105446]","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Population; Developed country","score_opus":0.1403254328760225,"score_gpt":0.32692120210521974,"score_spread":0.18659576922919724,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4415544018","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":[0.94572294,0.00009309854,0.0005186061,0.05057248,0.0007102406,0.00017436896,0.00000942633,0.0000069281696,0.0021919326],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98878676,0.005544552,0.0004755156,0.004107995,0.00025234013,0.000009752991,0.00003872045,0.000008388286,0.00077598426],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99896187,0.00021474177,0.00042645758,0.00009311987,0.00009850805,0.00020529088],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991576,0.00017470367,0.00027585772,0.000088431734,0.00022555575,0.000077838595],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0027740002,0.00006939004,0.00013338796,0.0005365535,0.00021800333,0.00037652111,0.00022189594,0.00005984258,0.000043777178],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004166995,0.00005890635,0.000035168865,0.00054118235,0.00005840088,0.00055239006,0.000024153393,0.00012453271,0.000006233664],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","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":[0.00012218641,0.0003025267,0.28100204,0.000055344808,0.00009818125,0.000009780658,0.22868824,0.002315132,0.00012296652,0.3801822,0.07828409,0.028817283],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00063643156,0.000105331994,0.0910445,0.000047288217,0.000027202732,0.000005245318,0.1278635,0.005826501,0.00002084805,0.008891071,0.7653725,0.0001595905],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0015391771,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.096152864,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6870884,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00032090998,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00027263034,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.92034},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4416443050","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105537","title":"Tax policy and business entry","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Corporate Taxation and Avoidance","field":"Business, Management and Accounting","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Lincoln Institute of Land Policy; National Science Foundation","keywords":"Tax reform; State income tax; Indirect tax; Value-added tax; Tax avoidance; Ad valorem tax; Corporate tax; Tax credit","score_opus":0.018986758906367324,"score_gpt":0.22296593902838013,"score_spread":0.2039791801220128,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4416443050","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":[0.88635576,0.00025055622,0.0011835943,0.03581608,0.000758985,0.000052477866,0.0000014536816,0.000014861278,0.0755662],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.98993737,0.00031180735,0.00020296942,0.0051855366,0.0017524557,7.824338e-7,0.0000019763986,0.000007331075,0.0025997895],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9994561,0.0000044560234,0.00031455903,0.00007409762,0.000035328947,0.00011547046],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989702,0.00002576612,0.00062607485,0.00007984455,0.00028389652,0.00001423514],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00036744805,0.0000723237,0.00015079351,0.0005213104,0.00006925891,0.0004810097,0.00014836347,0.00003454047,0.00006167629],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00036890822,0.00006694887,0.00003814834,0.00037359542,0.00003333836,0.0014023584,0.00008354833,0.00008299542,0.000017594073],"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":[0.000019798268,0.00006153907,0.078245796,0.00009111248,0.00004878153,0.0000039404536,0.000011626459,0.000104618,0.00006678068,0.81907135,0.021796621,0.08047801],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006430022,0.0000026870862,0.07169672,0.00003006904,0.000014880436,0.0000089735095,0.000099275705,0.00074616243,0.0000102839895,0.028781174,0.8978773,0.00008952144],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000051779552,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00006564932,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.87608063,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000052058833,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001885074,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.46383876},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4416445578","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105542","title":"Corrigendum to “Pass-through of subsidies to prices under limited competition: Evidence from Canada’s Nutrition North program”. [J. Publ. Econ. 225 (2023)]","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Global trade and economics","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":true,"ca_institutions":"Toronto Metropolitan University; University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Subsidy; Food prices","score_opus":0.12680807086494425,"score_gpt":0.2507975510607597,"score_spread":0.12398948019581543,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4416445578","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":[0.9581749,0.0029436,0.0027577304,0.025469098,0.0041164933,0.0005586972,0.00079247257,0.000022074199,0.005164935],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9857258,0.0025959334,0.0077651413,0.0029438848,0.00040252227,0.000042071628,0.000057158082,0.000027476686,0.00043998254],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.99683833,0.000028916726,0.0020946723,0.00046871314,0.000060544768,0.000508807],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99726534,0.00016377201,0.0014377467,0.0004613948,0.00032577701,0.000345987],"candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006029675,0.00028201882,0.0009971551,0.0005788882,0.00012698912,0.00034510103,0.000853256,0.00015091714,0.00031561678],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00032794895,0.00034561468,0.00024636847,0.00054376514,0.00006374215,0.0013905354,0.00015790574,0.00027454633,0.00007873183],"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":[0.00031491453,0.0012661582,0.47074798,0.00032318392,0.001575903,0.00001923744,0.00078676414,0.0060768826,0.000029479535,0.3601569,0.1539166,0.004786009],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0012232639,0.00045892925,0.34763676,0.00026800204,0.00004965675,0.000014212178,0.0010931256,0.00062385184,0.00023484835,0.022012921,0.6258049,0.0005795486],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.056045946,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.3914083,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.47188827,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0012296514,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00089814037,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99989957},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4416887953","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105536","title":"Distributionally sensitive cost-benefit analysis","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Income, Poverty, and Inequality","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto; Canada Research Chairs; Queen's University","funders":"","keywords":"Commodity; Pareto principle; Inequality; Aggregate (composite); Marginal utility; Economic inequality; Applied general equilibrium; Pareto efficiency","score_opus":0.03591171860479393,"score_gpt":0.315532039495515,"score_spread":0.2796203208907211,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W4416887953","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":[0.8715218,0.000094401665,0.012742829,0.022353804,0.0011389131,0.0000973315,0.0001167839,0.00001325347,0.09192089],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.99638397,0.00028686266,0.00021053733,0.0009506242,0.0003681992,5.8734975e-7,0.000013905029,0.0000026066987,0.0017826856],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","domain_scores_codex":[0.9988668,0.0001492703,0.0005241637,0.000102216276,0.00012675408,0.00023076963],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9983844,0.00025948448,0.00044832993,0.000113691196,0.00064890296,0.00014520476],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002803245,0.00007319873,0.00030626633,0.0003042448,0.0002882519,0.00021043359,0.0002669167,0.00009340315,0.00019109149],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006259518,0.00007054754,0.000321944,0.0005070874,0.00013197177,0.0005481612,0.00003947708,0.00016491904,0.000009751557],"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":[0.00001830273,0.000087404995,0.06471773,0.0000032670503,0.00094131165,0.0000030052404,0.0011246743,0.00032403652,0.0000030450235,0.9238765,0.003315778,0.005584925],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0008210556,0.000056107583,0.27063948,0.000015995567,0.0005448809,0.0000042656416,0.011319557,0.0012278707,0.00007589475,0.05793363,0.6570748,0.00028645483],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003888555,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003916711,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8659429,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00074053893,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00085032405,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.28768453},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W609222134","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2017.02.001","title":"Teacher performance pay: Experimental evidence from Pakistan","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":57,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":false,"route_ca_fund":true,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Global Affairs Canada; World Bank Group; Department for International Development; Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University; Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Ireland; Harvard University","keywords":"Receipt; Incentive; Cash; Test (biology); Government (linguistics); Medical education; Psychology; Mathematics education; Demographic economics; Economics; Medicine; Finance; Accounting","score_opus":0.10651305102654579,"score_gpt":0.3743335423388615,"score_spread":0.2678204913123157,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W609222134","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":[0.98027176,0.0006019508,0.00001841094,0.0068279738,0.0013448994,0.000043511573,0.0000027873912,0.000008426568,0.01088026],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9923096,0.0021583228,0.0003731859,0.00019115061,0.003589359,0.0000017972228,5.2146834e-7,0.000009114728,0.001366952],"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","domain_scores_codex":[0.9989921,0.00006904259,0.0003873801,0.00012122671,0.00016655875,0.00026369706],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99838185,0.00010640717,0.0008272713,0.00032775148,0.00012254232,0.00023416415],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0017427144,0.00009244513,0.00019595477,0.00006243419,0.0009086455,0.0008965124,0.0010499712,0.00008975857,0.0008583693],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00041020205,0.00007528969,0.00010447712,0.000026592517,0.00021210141,0.0046718474,0.00007480869,0.0002927821,0.0000731383],"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":[0.00003855054,0.000063361615,0.9642272,0.0000031538912,0.00004706614,0.000004012698,0.0054385755,0.0000124313865,0.00013208135,0.0005603258,0.0055631264,0.02391012],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0007741697,0.00017997147,0.55409443,0.00011993114,0.000021937998,0.000009511087,0.0075931987,0.00045962053,0.0013165419,0.00056782976,0.43454686,0.00031600782],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00093082874,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0014682423,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.42898372,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00028675515,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0005335186,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9398542},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W7116700457","doi":"10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105544","title":"Optimal income tax deductions for mixed business and personal expenditures","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Public Economics","topic":"Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth","field":"Economics, Econometrics and Finance","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"route_ca_aff":true,"route_ca_fund":false,"route_ca_venue":false,"route_about_ca":false,"ca_institutions":"Dalhousie University","funders":"","keywords":"Tax deduction; Consumption (sociology); Pareto principle; Tax rate; Marginal utility; Income tax; Fraction (chemistry)","score_opus":0.03746003876003576,"score_gpt":0.2414664947433118,"score_spread":0.20400645598327605,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","prediction":{"id":"W7116700457","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":[0.9606856,0.0015860001,0.008953438,0.015492738,0.0023481585,0.00015927714,0.0002561496,0.000011126452,0.010507491],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9946009,0.00019417955,0.0032224772,0.0004446224,0.0007499727,0.000016096665,0.000008477116,0.000019962901,0.0007433407],"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","domain_scores_codex":[0.9984495,0.0000121731555,0.0009831274,0.00024047555,0.000011826572,0.00030290906],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987559,0.00013972732,0.00073873845,0.00014401047,0.00007666063,0.00014497752],"candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00087953825,0.00016014295,0.0005395892,0.0006602814,0.0001779597,0.00024088503,0.0002715264,0.00013920145,0.000057872126],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00028615087,0.00018254804,0.00019577488,0.00010890634,0.00011920104,0.0008114742,0.00007439063,0.00018524588,0.000013408245],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"study_design_scores_codex":[0.0000677069,0.0001301692,0.042567246,0.000094134426,0.000389424,0.0000011979284,0.00027115853,0.00024473414,0.000008427865,0.9346296,0.018852755,0.0027434062],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0031736072,0.00016471671,0.18268639,0.00004036484,0.00004209139,0.00014665889,0.00074175803,0.0060898387,0.00009019473,0.4646631,0.34165207,0.00050922943],"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000025298117,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00003415457,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.46996656,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00020508957,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00013570982,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7444093},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null}]}