{"meta":{"page":1,"per_page":50,"max_per_page":100,"total":552,"total_is_capped":false,"direct_labels_cover":0,"predictions_cover":552,"direct_label_status":"direct model label, unvalidated","prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated (Codex and Gemma teacher distillation)","score_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline (scores rank; they never assert a category)","snapshot":{"source":"OpenAlex, pinned release, all 482 partitions","release":"2026-06-24","frame_built":"2026-07-12"},"query_hash":"e567c469dc22","filters":{"topic":"Media Influence and Health"}},"results":[{"id":"W2147279990","doi":"10.1111/j.1745-6924.2008.00073.x","title":"The Function of Fiction is the Abstraction and Simulation of Social Experience","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Perspectives on Psychological Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":1296,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto; York University","funders":"Agence Nationale de la Recherche","keywords":"Narrative; Abstraction; Empathy; Function (biology); Inference; Psychology; Cognitive science; Entertainment; Cognitive psychology; Computer science; Social psychology; Epistemology; Artificial intelligence; Visual arts; Literature; Art","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1092634717191107,"gpt":0.3913414611223037,"spread":0.282077989403193,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":["sts"],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003602742,0.0000494942,0.00006361912,0.0000328734,0.001416005,0.00002711447,0.0001272544,0.00002199425,0.0002012123],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001194064,0.00002408765,0.00002750013,0.000104543,0.003162268,0.000194493,0.0000110901,0.00009688595,0.000004930139],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002211986,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001308796,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003595284,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000006976465,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9992256,0.00002885113,0.0001472134,0.0001949426,0.0002898961,0.0001135288],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994056,0.0001743693,0.000130387,0.0001106667,0.0001560057,0.00002294143],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0003652522,0.000301422,0.001255299,0.000007314213,0.000007218515,3.697814e-7,0.6408085,0.0002338068,0.003241254,0.3351009,0.0007994501,0.0178792],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002352071,0.0009242402,0.820008,0.00001036812,0.000006623384,0.000002645348,0.1561517,0.0009750078,0.0003127824,0.004076134,0.01719472,0.0001025548],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9778979,0.00006221604,0.00005538747,0.001063182,0.0002943542,0.0001139234,0.00000189627,0.00001052491,0.02050066],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9993581,0.0001535751,0.000006264303,0.0002041264,0.0001281054,0.000008223987,1.166375e-7,0.00000128626,0.0001402495],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8187527,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.999884,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2057169245","doi":"10.1007/s10902-009-9171-4","title":"Pursuing Pleasure or Virtue: The Differential and Overlapping Well-Being Benefits of Hedonic and Eudaimonic Motives","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Happiness Studies","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":1257,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Ottawa","funders":"","keywords":"Eudaimonia; Pleasure; Positive psychology; Well-being; Experience sampling method; Psychology; Vitality; Social psychology; Affect (linguistics); Happiness; Life satisfaction; Meaning (existential); Trait; Flourishing; Subjective well-being; Developmental psychology; Psychotherapist","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05522890215453565,"gpt":0.2904729778995898,"spread":0.2352440757450541,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003527147,0.0001550801,0.0004913725,0.0001158152,0.0004983183,0.00008485309,0.0001211552,0.00002859866,0.00003725336],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001577327,0.00008052824,0.00006485505,0.00004464684,0.0003210533,0.0002936298,0.00005316912,0.0002162186,5.939378e-7],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001801594,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00004336884,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001748493,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001573982,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9988745,0.00005009001,0.0005017691,0.0001084025,0.0002696766,0.0001956057],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988892,0.0002344497,0.0004425784,0.00008394266,0.0002957139,0.00005408401],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0009899327,0.0003738337,0.01912556,0.001841256,0.001949345,0.00006749018,0.4655272,0.0002012992,0.002558078,0.4357404,0.002348605,0.06927691],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.005359958,0.004230469,0.6639637,0.007470396,0.001055748,0.0003445176,0.2642451,0.0002884902,0.0005053238,0.03493022,0.01664116,0.0009649037],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9722598,0.02309116,0.000008229509,0.002880126,0.0003928807,0.0001110164,0.00000244454,0.000006992593,0.001247324],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9869395,0.01185332,0.00002170433,0.0002440268,0.0007529429,0.000001778882,1.911476e-7,0.00000690785,0.0001795891],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6448382,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3832712,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2133404106","doi":"10.1037/pspi0000018","title":"Awe, the small self, and prosocial behavior.","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":1172,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Prosocial behavior; Generosity; Psychology; Social psychology; Entitlement (fair division); Helping behavior; Feeling; Altruism (biology); Empathic concern; Empathy; Developmental psychology; Perspective-taking","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2276273554608186,"gpt":0.383617429588656,"spread":0.1559900741278374,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009977658,0.00007323019,0.000198062,0.00003045504,0.0004064863,0.00006918973,0.00009192905,0.00007810217,0.00008914075],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00002847004,0.00004767574,0.00005579487,0.00001550323,0.0005077937,0.0001013925,0.00001569539,0.0003120179,0.000004230218],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001856034,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001041719,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001150142,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004512499,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9992139,0.000153855,0.0002470084,0.00008243511,0.0001501835,0.0001525782],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.999432,0.00004759162,0.0001998384,0.00003954721,0.000183054,0.00009795921],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0002031614,0.0002762855,0.02406785,0.00004970614,0.00008615386,0.00002853851,0.7446046,1.901121e-8,0.00002023833,0.1845282,0.03636809,0.009767103],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002037581,0.0007731644,0.1894311,0.00001381791,0.0001692149,0.0001875133,0.05551414,0.000001132722,0.000001320441,0.02177984,0.7299061,0.0001851253],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9714205,0.000504249,0.000002435409,0.0191898,0.0007634726,0.00008685449,0.000008332104,0.000006790063,0.008017548],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9895324,0.0001337993,0.00006057349,0.006273621,0.003700492,0.000004462795,8.951037e-7,0.000006002407,0.0002877543],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.693538,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3126405,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2626605398","doi":"10.1177/1754073916684557","title":"Self-Transcendent Emotions and Their Social Functions: Compassion, Gratitude, and Awe Bind Us to Others Through Prosociality","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Emotion Review","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":666,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Gratitude; Psychology; Prosocial behavior; Compassion; Social psychology; Self-compassion; Cognitive psychology; Mindfulness; Psychotherapist","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.09780250628734691,"gpt":0.3410259963677292,"spread":0.2432234900803823,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003690252,0.0001454675,0.0003141343,0.00002119367,0.002463184,0.0002540427,0.0001055012,0.00004286996,0.0006706543],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00004600796,0.0001056859,0.00006814994,0.00002354408,0.0002014434,0.0003356253,0.00003089255,0.0001260717,0.00008599224],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003282265,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00005341849,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003022169,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001311926,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9990643,0.000101709,0.0002923511,0.0002307517,0.0001326711,0.0001782217],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993727,0.0000211819,0.0001740259,0.0002174602,0.0001167225,0.00009789118],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00002610323,0.000646204,0.01265469,0.01561129,0.0002612966,0.000003528283,0.1794701,3.731323e-7,0.000037329,0.4779794,0.1896615,0.1236482],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002442442,0.00006255489,0.04179246,0.001051083,0.00005953244,0.000002174008,0.001028414,0.000003303533,0.000001853013,0.001736748,0.9538649,0.0001527797],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.4938797,0.09110541,0.001884567,0.2991951,0.005790018,0.01117532,0.0006931079,0.0007267879,0.09554999],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.8121598,0.1532654,0.0006235716,0.0258464,0.003092464,0.000425877,0.00007560328,0.00006064504,0.004450243],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7642033,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9988354,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1972735198","doi":"10.1515/comm.2009.025","title":"Exploring the link between reading fiction and empathy: Ruling out individual differences and examining outcomes","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Communications","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":537,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto; York University","funders":"Agence Nationale de la Recherche","keywords":"Empathy; Loneliness; Psychology; Openness to experience; Social psychology; Extraversion and introversion; Big Five personality traits; Reading (process); Personality; Trait; Contrast (vision); Perspective-taking; Task (project management); Computer science; Linguistics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.5592369440838505,"gpt":0.3607262622570776,"spread":0.1985106818267729,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003277777,0.00008165871,0.0001339482,0.00006399604,0.001427429,0.0002426276,0.0002862575,0.00001979422,0.00001066271],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00008414853,0.00005706115,0.00001414663,0.00002263261,0.0002012282,0.0003496794,0.0001102379,0.0002277036,0.000005192665],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000008935509,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001479724,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00009015689,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001964388,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9994154,0.00007285389,0.0002007956,0.00008697151,0.00009203496,0.0001319285],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987887,0.0006163713,0.00007724168,0.0004351552,0.00003218733,0.00005035137],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000001136355,0.000009043311,0.1657188,0.00001215823,0.00002683762,1.374491e-7,0.4708505,3.713599e-7,0.000007387028,0.07163627,0.00005166026,0.2916857],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0001117978,0.00006006054,0.9375554,0.00008568262,0.00004729336,5.603355e-7,0.04107739,0.00005441361,0.00000376341,0.002539738,0.01835544,0.000108469],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9823072,0.0006752854,0.00001847039,0.01014954,0.0001042178,0.0001242692,0.00001070433,0.00005828693,0.006552011],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9971022,0.001785493,0.0002340323,0.0003428653,0.000361417,0.00003104632,0.00001677332,0.000005015379,0.0001211384],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7718366,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9998726,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2613687067","doi":"10.1037/pspa0000087","title":"Awe, the diminished self, and collective engagement: Universals and cultural variations in the small self.","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":454,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Collectivism; Psychology; PsycINFO; Social psychology; Self-enhancement; Problem of universals; Individualism; Self; Cognitive psychology; Epistemology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1654242010818556,"gpt":0.3782227387843213,"spread":0.2127985377024657,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001259939,0.00006512326,0.0001566567,0.00003106145,0.002009606,0.0002216154,0.0001428509,0.00005145684,0.00006028602],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00005979541,0.00003647673,0.00003347466,0.00001360558,0.0004537028,0.0001859913,0.00002219491,0.0003273734,5.595658e-7],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001915384,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00006043495,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001857841,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001116237,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9991938,0.0003441702,0.0001725773,0.00008214377,0.00009071254,0.000116586],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993579,0.0002147391,0.0002431068,0.00006235413,0.00009125791,0.00003060467],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00005436214,0.00007826215,0.007965471,0.00001971361,0.00007635308,0.000008196395,0.8448895,1.826592e-8,0.000003623992,0.1432392,0.003067342,0.0005980359],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001328616,0.000232739,0.7805126,0.00001300328,0.00009354617,0.00003890593,0.1234063,0.00000760672,1.875925e-7,0.01516435,0.07912096,0.00008125064],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9440977,0.0001786303,0.000002814262,0.04100154,0.0002273465,0.0001153221,0.00001050992,0.000002893977,0.01436324],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9953951,0.0004129955,0.0000444939,0.003343897,0.0006246367,0.000002602872,5.420719e-7,0.000002351161,0.0001733837],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7725471,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9992896,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2483358378","doi":"10.1016/j.tics.2016.06.002","title":"Fiction: Simulation of Social Worlds","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"review","venue":"Trends in Cognitive Sciences","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":440,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"Agence Nationale de la Recherche; One Mind","keywords":"Psychology; Consciousness; Cognition; Everyday life; Cognitive science; Fiction theory; Literary fiction; Cognitive psychology; Social psychology; Aesthetics; Epistemology; Literature; Literary criticism; Art; Neuroscience","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.4865662527695975,"gpt":0.5136593866057366,"spread":0.02709313383613915,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005470898,0.0001720196,0.0006584097,0.0007609592,0.0003112339,0.00005204606,0.0001886894,0.00008128066,0.008166913],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00007041397,0.0001082091,0.0001691379,0.0003242921,0.001185117,0.0002362236,0.00002836658,0.0001454112,0.00008268383],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003881727,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000198317,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00002984499,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002823644,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9985517,0.0001205333,0.000497671,0.0002903983,0.0003049031,0.0002347812],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988218,0.0006087454,0.0003776611,0.00005468744,0.0001061794,0.00003092724],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000002057078,0.00001977412,0.000005242452,0.0005152266,0.000008387401,8.098871e-7,0.004266766,4.452273e-7,2.755959e-9,0.01106822,0.0003300374,0.983783],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.000099383,0.00007436789,0.00001777621,0.005677766,0.000053814,3.283306e-7,0.0007485878,0.000008399307,8.22161e-8,0.0003376076,0.9928368,0.0001450875],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[0.00001845817,0.750814,0.000003975826,0.00005343674,0.0005812892,0.0001303002,0.000153623,0.00001762708,0.2482273],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.004421585,0.9890525,0.000005195763,0.00005205123,0.001118806,0.00004590689,0.00003253327,0.000009575929,0.005261789],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9925067,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9927397,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2164660261","doi":"10.1080/02699931.2010.515151","title":"Emotion and narrative fiction: Interactive influences before, during, and after reading","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"review","venue":"Cognition & Emotion","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":416,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto; York University","funders":"","keywords":"Narrative; Psychology; Reading (process); Sketch; Affect (linguistics); Mood; Cognitive psychology; Social psychology; Literature; Linguistics; Communication; Art; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04590190918484924,"gpt":0.3194818683503162,"spread":0.273579959165467,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0001975394,0.0003407102,0.0006186559,0.0003307821,0.0006677677,0.000305508,0.00005545878,0.0002643522,0.001187791],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00008467227,0.0002834967,0.0001055758,0.00005936707,0.0003394188,0.0009390034,0.00004222204,0.000652178,0.00008474101],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006364781,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00006574695,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003624413,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001938924,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9985096,0.0001370384,0.0005061253,0.0004404392,0.0001807717,0.0002259725],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989828,0.00007942531,0.0004434402,0.0001299931,0.0002411708,0.0001231988],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003169707,0.00004921033,0.00004911316,0.008681199,0.00007775686,0.00001092505,0.07835104,2.651958e-8,0.000001699386,0.002160861,0.0001662199,0.9104202],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0003619934,0.0002600995,0.001538431,0.01853765,0.0005916288,0.0001207945,0.008766648,0.00000631462,0.000002863444,0.001936356,0.9673793,0.0004979131],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[0.1167862,0.8658763,0.00002044178,0.0001643984,0.002791702,0.002028861,0.0002520859,0.0002209443,0.01185905],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.0284764,0.9681166,0.00002786822,0.0001315971,0.001729772,0.0002547333,0.0003655988,0.00003599572,0.0008613867],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9672131,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999617,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2560356177","doi":"10.1037/pspp0000120","title":"The dark side of the sublime: Distinguishing a threat-based variant of awe.","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":376,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Psychology; Feeling; PsycINFO; Social psychology; Arousal; Great Rift; Situational ethics; Terrorism; Certainty","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.08828656503500684,"gpt":0.3451974269091632,"spread":0.2569108618741563,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001319887,0.00006671642,0.0002388423,0.00002690616,0.0004539798,0.00002370266,0.0002128811,0.00005634397,0.000124195],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002512396,0.00002879391,0.0001475573,0.00002625741,0.00104859,0.00007240697,0.00001626572,0.000178906,6.873993e-7],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001581901,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001480073,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002007359,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0007091396,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9989011,0.000226102,0.0004369697,0.00007062958,0.0002160582,0.0001491566],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9985199,0.0004714483,0.0006304755,0.00009526636,0.0002462881,0.00003659556],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0008941049,0.0003277998,0.03549341,0.0002049521,0.0002573751,0.00001453663,0.130636,3.449364e-7,0.001826786,0.7868383,0.0146171,0.02888933],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.004410086,0.001020595,0.6211454,0.0004843797,0.0002422175,0.00007058051,0.02176915,0.000004416055,0.0001853314,0.1472922,0.2030871,0.0002884711],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.947099,0.0003333408,0.0000422704,0.04320771,0.0008906836,0.00006573651,0.00003667603,0.000002410478,0.008322174],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9974289,0.00006817236,0.00001869197,0.001510387,0.0008199282,8.992608e-7,2.114186e-7,0.000004205759,0.0001486195],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.639546,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3863572,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2125381870","doi":"10.1037/emo0000033","title":"Positive affect and markers of inflammation: Discrete positive emotions predict lower levels of inflammatory cytokines.","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Emotion","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":308,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Proinflammatory cytokine; Affect (linguistics); Psychology; Trait; Personality; Big Five personality traits; Developmental psychology; Social psychology; Inflammation; Clinical psychology; Immunology; Medicine","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.03221744987115915,"gpt":0.2610263329156072,"spread":0.228808883044448,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003972202,0.0001197215,0.0002141404,0.0001368468,0.0001037481,0.0000254054,0.00006148542,0.0000584246,0.0002647596],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001070197,0.0001049536,0.00005321889,0.00004728699,0.0003242603,0.0004671019,0.00003064833,0.0000971841,0.00001356864],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004564544,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001069262,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001604758,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001711374,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9989948,0.0001111432,0.0003504362,0.0001441246,0.0002547246,0.0001448089],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990635,0.00009064108,0.0002442462,0.0001377688,0.0003576272,0.0001062469],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.001911607,0.0004046257,0.04595455,0.002171542,0.0007177459,0.00004848261,0.4031637,0.0004350964,0.009416332,0.4886512,0.01056853,0.03655664],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002443568,0.002412707,0.9676189,0.001360674,0.0001854781,0.00001710028,0.01082111,0.0009238377,0.004979094,0.005741475,0.003026298,0.0004697881],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9818855,0.00006429184,0.0002264856,0.0005078324,0.0004196599,0.0003829106,0.0002320834,0.00002857612,0.01625269],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9989822,0.00001872381,0.00006851301,0.00004864945,0.0003817694,0.0000082441,0.0000469182,0.00001111786,0.0004338783],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9216643,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.4279882,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2752297346","doi":"10.1037/pspi0000109","title":"Awe and humility.","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":288,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"John Templeton Foundation","keywords":"Humility; Psychology; Virtue; Social psychology; PsycINFO; Feeling; Prosocial behavior; Narcissism; Epistemology; Law","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1817208058559596,"gpt":0.4166197590192539,"spread":0.2348989531632942,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006181988,0.00005920332,0.0002102061,0.00003148767,0.001052034,0.000115349,0.0001126058,0.00006284721,0.0004441426],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00005035443,0.00004745253,0.00005283099,0.000002969038,0.0008966943,0.0002147021,0.00001863665,0.0002217453,0.000004313984],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000007133081,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00003075004,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001713325,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004566174,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9994252,0.0000572444,0.0002109741,0.00008198315,0.0001000961,0.0001244509],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994454,0.00003337984,0.0002843028,0.00007245417,0.00009614358,0.00006829307],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0003590923,0.0001980739,0.05875383,0.000201944,0.0001427853,0.00004899805,0.3332371,1.371351e-8,0.0001424035,0.5359349,0.02688359,0.04409729],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0008913139,0.0002453185,0.5247325,0.00001677432,0.00003171679,0.00004813109,0.006515763,7.086488e-7,0.000001355995,0.0312677,0.4361544,0.00009434106],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9530842,0.0003805655,0.000003783382,0.02600466,0.0006527023,0.00002914683,0.000008806099,0.000002696264,0.01983346],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9934641,0.0002916828,0.00003183989,0.003754362,0.002069503,5.154616e-7,3.770685e-7,0.000003193621,0.0003844271],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.5046672,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.8091499,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1974171265","doi":"10.1017/s0021849903030332","title":"Does It Pay to Shock? Reactions to Shocking and Nonshocking Advertising Content among University Students","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Advertising Research","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":277,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Manitoba; University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Advertising; Shock (circulatory); Context (archaeology); Psychology; Content analysis; Content (measure theory); Social psychology; Business; Sociology; Medicine; History; Social science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.132296086293051,"gpt":0.3792627074235549,"spread":0.2469666211305039,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002901112,0.0001480078,0.000322086,0.0008603787,0.001312438,0.0004080989,0.0003488297,0.00005759538,0.0002778182],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001095112,0.00009459804,0.00008474692,0.0002405794,0.000193032,0.0007294876,0.0001464888,0.0008025207,0.000026425],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0004719738,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002557923,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0008703226,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00271564,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9970345,0.0003565581,0.0005485193,0.0002546466,0.001195841,0.0006099659],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9975108,0.0004978358,0.0001651412,0.0002048389,0.0009928191,0.0006285697],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0007860158,0.0005720418,0.7182882,0.0003905298,0.0003571734,0.0009841875,0.221042,0.0004510377,0.008890683,0.01432183,0.01026994,0.02364632],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001668237,0.001130964,0.137805,0.004152888,0.00007331482,0.0000868166,0.1512424,0.00003210578,0.001697817,0.0007847578,0.7008048,0.0005209779],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9917948,0.00007174106,0.000235218,0.003128383,0.0007933916,0.0003124973,0.000004263536,0.00001452345,0.003645161],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9931971,0.000179318,0.0004877071,0.0004050797,0.0003860851,0.000001501347,3.610991e-7,0.00002058462,0.005322209],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6905348,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999877,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2404781118","doi":"10.1145/2858036.2858062","title":"Fostering Intrinsic Motivation through Avatar Identification in Digital Games","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":260,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Saskatchewan","funders":"","keywords":"Intrinsic motivation; Avatar; Operationalization; Identification (biology); Self-determination theory; Self identification; Entertainment; Affect (linguistics); Human–computer interaction; Psychology; Autonomy; Embodied cognition; Computer science; Social psychology; Multimedia; Artificial intelligence; Communication; Sociology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1109607481378469,"gpt":0.2875058548814618,"spread":0.1765451067436149,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00007963915,0.00005699341,0.00007179636,0.00005859919,0.00005864232,0.0001221807,0.00006514933,0.00001827462,0.001082899],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00008888848,0.00003574579,0.0000159285,0.00002176263,0.00006039974,0.001409197,0.00004037292,0.00003177277,0.0004858478],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0000372891,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001754678,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000139357,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004490857,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9994197,0.000005960783,0.0002241184,0.00012501,0.00009315158,0.0001319922],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9997001,0.00006862042,0.00005068733,0.0001156945,0.00004459469,0.00002030123],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00001660525,0.00005647124,0.01426344,0.00004881933,0.0000061897,0.00000216722,0.03025114,5.616855e-7,0.0008060288,0.653779,0.002137589,0.2986319],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002145816,0.0002394198,0.1646623,0.0006526634,0.0000115129,0.000004312008,0.01414945,0.00002630925,0.004476669,0.3215869,0.4912638,0.000780766],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9329188,0.00002482362,0.0004547972,0.001506511,0.0003172364,0.0001459177,0.000009675196,0.00006179932,0.06456047],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9945883,0.00003858678,0.00001851817,0.0003249775,0.0002502707,0.00001605728,0.000008341552,0.000005925051,0.004749068],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4891262,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9998302,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2997377425","doi":"10.1073/pnas.1910704117","title":"What music makes us feel: At least 13 dimensions organize subjective experiences associated with music across different cultures","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":238,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"National Institute of Mental Health; European Commission; Horizon 2020; Greater Good Science Center, University of California Berkeley","keywords":"Active listening; Feeling; Psychology; Universality (dynamical systems); Music and emotion; Valence (chemistry); Music psychology; Cognitive psychology; Social psychology; Music education; Music history; Communication; Pedagogy","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.09455034896775363,"gpt":0.3061388490937933,"spread":0.2115885001260397,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003754738,0.0001598661,0.000254775,0.00005368116,0.001153948,0.0001888085,0.0006059505,0.00006362598,0.0003212901],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004887526,0.00008433127,0.0000665402,0.0003361703,0.002244713,0.001094409,0.0001746786,0.0002003163,0.00000509283],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006044815,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00004203379,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003851058,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00005358393,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9977725,0.00001176324,0.0003178212,0.000324579,0.001295394,0.0002780151],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987919,0.0001474218,0.0005031259,0.000009564528,0.0004541086,0.00009389034],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001080117,0.0001908291,0.04796076,0.0001494236,0.00009301681,8.524401e-8,0.8538704,0.0000559302,0.03232702,0.05890167,0.00621864,0.000124197],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001003968,0.0007333521,0.321437,0.0009590109,0.00007248554,0.000008561124,0.5655975,0.000493313,0.09678519,0.009653356,0.00266482,0.0005913957],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":"qualitative","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9926388,0.0002134839,3.288242e-8,0.005033493,0.00009528793,0.0002495114,0.00003101027,0.00002891144,0.001709442],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9965776,0.00005940487,0.00001671251,0.002774499,0.0002409233,0.00003146211,6.636142e-7,0.000006855506,0.0002919295],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.2882729,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.8875348,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2072213669","doi":"10.1515/jlt-2015-0005","title":"Effects of Literature on Empathy and Self-Reflection: A Theoretical-Empirical Framework","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Literary Theory","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":215,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Empathy; Narrativity; Reading (process); Narrative; Psychology; Empirical research; Epistemology; Metaphor; Consciousness; Social psychology; Linguistics; Philosophy","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.02463920494335881,"gpt":0.3047658087372937,"spread":0.2801266037939349,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00100977,0.0001332717,0.0003180262,0.000196539,0.00008095561,0.0001146698,0.0001274032,0.0001025306,0.0001933539],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003735106,0.00008439066,0.0001006289,0.00006952637,0.0002583598,0.0003252862,0.00002207375,0.0005513292,0.00001019488],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002570223,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001064273,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":2.918047e-7,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":1.387385e-7,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9986462,0.0003688631,0.0004184278,0.0001042049,0.0003021783,0.0001601409],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.998049,0.001049057,0.0002584346,0.0001276355,0.0002712808,0.0002446348],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0005115668,0.0002382798,0.0001849515,0.0001807742,0.00004855631,0.00008240339,0.1955844,4.374049e-7,0.000008119792,0.7993975,0.001816169,0.001946801],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0007099262,0.002520907,0.0004598377,0.001332927,0.00006397686,0.0001103724,0.001320648,0.00000688742,0.0001760306,0.9328075,0.06037169,0.0001193043],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":"theoretical_or_conceptual","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9712244,0.009640047,0.00009860071,0.001173794,0.001353635,0.000143094,0.000006848104,0.0000240744,0.01633555],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9927709,0.00032071,0.000571161,0.003904729,0.002130094,0.000002826871,9.742198e-7,0.00001467404,0.0002839814],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.1942638,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3441351,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1842565611","doi":"10.1093/scan/nsv114","title":"Reading fiction and reading minds: the role of simulation in the default network","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":210,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McGill University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Andrew W. Mellon Foundation","keywords":"Psychology; Reading (process); Subnetwork; Cognition; Cognitive psychology; Default mode network; Social cognition; Social neuroscience; Mediation; Social network (sociolinguistics); Neuroscience; Social media; Linguistics; Sociology; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06843987737808904,"gpt":0.3221922454959164,"spread":0.2537523681178273,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007164988,0.00006689207,0.00009399537,0.0000342704,0.0006319945,0.00008358694,0.00005784844,0.00002260663,0.00000224535],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004075726,0.0000410954,0.00001612058,0.0001118408,0.0005508078,0.0002395223,0.00002487081,0.0001345656,7.672871e-7],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001146635,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002975047,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002337572,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001801395,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9992071,0.0002208014,0.0001015324,0.0001499632,0.0001643062,0.0001562754],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991246,0.000629565,0.00008401388,0.00003167653,0.0001025648,0.00002762212],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001901924,0.00009702489,0.06058723,0.00004178008,0.000007461548,0.000005955257,0.7380967,0.000265688,0.001028029,0.1361296,0.0002889142,0.06326149],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001457099,0.001333059,0.4963319,0.0003036955,0.00009871892,0.000009487155,0.4051729,0.01394498,0.000493877,0.05936664,0.02104044,0.0004472109],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9850174,0.000115909,0.00007194398,0.0001905828,0.0001760733,0.0003310113,0.000007699762,0.000007703145,0.01408166],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9988433,0.00002302602,0.000001158187,0.0007383884,0.000348471,0.00001820098,0.000001031431,0.000003345191,0.00002311038],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4357446,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.4860855,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2129496237","doi":"10.1111/j.1468-2958.2001.tb00788.x","title":"Admirer-celebrity relationships among young adults..","year":2001,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Human Communication Research","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":207,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Calgary","funders":"","keywords":"Psychology; Social psychology; Developmental psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.4181149455469653,"gpt":0.4283038510955087,"spread":0.0101889055485434,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.003447791,0.0001058075,0.0001441507,0.0003108795,0.00457581,0.0003141331,0.0008469904,0.00008377065,0.005572332],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005042342,0.0001038061,0.00005175501,0.0001680393,0.001046392,0.0004611636,0.0002158335,0.00136218,0.001049964],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001288679,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001201298,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.01045663,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.07511102,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9971712,0.001140251,0.0003879973,0.0002271976,0.0006236454,0.0004497628],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9970784,0.000625737,0.00009488672,0.001281485,0.0006857134,0.0002338156],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003009069,0.0001746417,0.1807521,0.00005005601,0.00001125096,0.000004625419,0.05549575,0.000001085019,0.00001262552,0.7320654,0.02992518,0.001477165],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006052074,0.0001209487,0.1473649,0.0001929473,0.000006649795,0.000004869577,0.03245517,0.0001699568,0.00001053703,0.02638486,0.7924424,0.0002415986],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.6865879,0.0004944048,0.000003958231,0.002200121,0.00005278092,0.0003836134,0.000004947439,0.0001062337,0.310166],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9813718,0.000813562,0.00006846549,0.0001493028,0.0002846694,0.0001891689,0.0001191413,0.00002025455,0.01698365],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7625172,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9997278,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2023489446","doi":"10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.02.038","title":"Narratives that address affective forecasting errors reduce perceived barriers to colorectal cancer screening","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Social Science & Medicine","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":188,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Dillon Consulting","funders":"National Cancer Institute; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; American Cancer Society","keywords":"Narrative; Colorectal cancer; Intervention (counseling); Medicine; Psychology; Cancer; Cancer screening; Family medicine; Internal medicine; Nursing","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.08924564254578933,"gpt":0.3595525400847046,"spread":0.2703068975389152,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["sts"],"category_scores_codex":[0.001128598,0.0001838225,0.0003007707,0.0001991302,0.003229068,0.00009442412,0.0004080691,0.000060683,0.004957861],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001320605,0.0001369655,0.00004681815,0.0002893747,0.00398851,0.0005221763,0.00005414633,0.0004571521,0.00001067083],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001063099,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0007041139,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.003337196,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.01241252,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9978937,0.00005374756,0.0002097001,0.0004209366,0.0007536674,0.0006682376],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9985577,0.0001100008,0.0001400532,0.0001001551,0.0003153526,0.0007767233],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00004100194,0.000008007382,0.004595791,0.00001322498,0.000008751351,0.000004414243,0.9443366,0.000001703134,0.03058826,0.008187306,0.002185605,0.01002935],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001108581,0.0006735834,0.06454425,0.000473031,0.00004730552,0.000006924043,0.8850997,0.0001822713,0.002217806,0.001377059,0.0435966,0.0006728523],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":"qualitative","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9508424,0.00002912369,0.000007767356,0.007326542,0.002612668,0.0004487564,0.00001683124,0.00006351313,0.03865235],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9935672,0.000004537537,0.00004668513,0.002203105,0.003716734,0.0001003296,0.000002905443,0.00001420423,0.0003442564],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.05994846,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9987221,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2003469141","doi":"10.1075/ssol.3.1.06dji","title":"Reading other minds","year":2013,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Scientific Study of Literature","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":181,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Empathy; Psychology; Openness to experience; Reading (process); Cognition; Personality; Big Five personality traits; Cognitive psychology; Developmental psychology; Social psychology; Psychiatry","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.03616166202777492,"gpt":0.2705442578085003,"spread":0.2343825957807254,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0002915112,0.00009058946,0.0001435645,0.0001678999,0.0003791674,0.0006888761,0.0001881076,0.00002929103,0.003860636],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00002312928,0.0000635151,0.00003562015,0.0001295653,0.0001834886,0.0003351226,0.00002655503,0.0001207181,0.0003182828],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000008094709,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002199499,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002111348,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001781935,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9990179,0.00003390787,0.0002264074,0.0002366532,0.0002831271,0.0002020157],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992532,0.00002879555,0.00008364008,0.0003071339,0.000261319,0.0000659654],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000006098562,0.0004255259,0.005288728,0.00007389119,0.00002409245,0.000003070097,0.8400722,4.482045e-7,0.0007051811,0.02848855,0.1227286,0.002183683],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006721199,0.0004186106,0.0061042,0.0002638446,0.00002204851,0.000001629407,0.08221883,0.00002587083,0.0002020173,0.002452089,0.9073651,0.0002535952],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9474277,0.0001905169,2.781048e-7,0.0001905452,0.00192809,0.0004327116,0.00001961665,0.00002498703,0.04978548],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.941714,8.520697e-7,0.00003357415,0.0002129233,0.0003577137,0.00003398248,0.000007745511,0.000007213567,0.05763201],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7846366,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99705,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3162940003","doi":"10.1177/0956797621995202","title":"The Experience of Empathy in Everyday Life","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Psychological Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":179,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of the Fraser Valley; University of Toronto","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Empathy; Psychology; Personal distress; Everyday life; Prosocial behavior; Compassion; Distress; Trait; Social psychology; Perspective (graphical); Perspective-taking; Empathic concern; Population; Perception; Developmental psychology; Clinical psychology; Demography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1270481500169163,"gpt":0.3916972123653954,"spread":0.2646490623484791,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006634329,0.00005011557,0.00009332605,0.0000277032,0.0003490048,0.00008373697,0.0004206292,0.00001846764,0.001044818],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0007111343,0.00002698372,0.00002464792,0.0002221957,0.001873113,0.0001596605,0.00005574584,0.0001084978,0.00005488457],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001354537,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0000894692,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00007324442,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000292789,"domain_scores_codex":[0.99892,0.00004021288,0.0002195237,0.0002333422,0.0003041329,0.0002827486],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993594,0.0001445224,0.00005254984,0.0002383588,0.0001030154,0.0001021731],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003411996,0.0003664311,0.02384046,0.00001224106,0.000001658253,0.00003349941,0.168376,0.000005362958,0.002981448,0.7803525,0.001800874,0.02219537],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006056254,0.0004133758,0.6122113,0.00008481425,0.000003035025,0.0000125945,0.08852673,0.000115428,0.001988282,0.02805363,0.2676205,0.000364665],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9397596,0.0002802162,0.000004417313,0.001600338,0.0005789364,0.00005482868,0.000001222814,0.00001005901,0.0577104],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9972523,0.0001591824,0.00005033796,0.001957463,0.0000817305,0.00001527401,1.631929e-7,0.000001231488,0.0004822982],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7522989,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9998683,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3147257585","doi":"10.1016/j.copsyc.2021.02.009","title":"Can positive and self-transcendent emotions promote pro-environmental behavior?","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"review","venue":"Current Opinion in Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":175,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Carleton University","funders":"","keywords":"Gratitude; Prosocial behavior; Psychology; Social psychology; Self-compassion; Compassion; Mindfulness; Psychotherapist","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1856746446031798,"gpt":0.4447733690940057,"spread":0.2590987244908259,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0001754047,0.0003551739,0.0009268196,0.0002101047,0.0001785549,0.00006048505,0.0001775269,0.0002034039,0.000805971],"category_scores_gemma":[0.000005126657,0.0003167412,0.0001831634,0.0000569199,0.0002394718,0.000072378,0.00004873131,0.0007492767,0.00007185667],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001243857,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001611859,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00002196968,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000052707,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9978622,0.0002846913,0.0006668699,0.000633678,0.0001638479,0.0003887376],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992756,0.00004257341,0.0002222853,0.0002970467,0.000020285,0.0001422004],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000001482895,0.0009354206,0.0001179329,0.005029519,0.00003880981,0.000007008101,0.007985971,5.733171e-9,4.336085e-8,0.008488609,0.00176979,0.9756254],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002931855,0.0001347936,0.0003604357,0.007104342,0.0001392606,0.00006643795,0.0002170754,3.002988e-7,1.186294e-8,0.0001017109,0.9912965,0.0002859801],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[0.0001025236,0.9868234,0.000001929625,0.0002358143,0.0101437,0.001504961,0.0005176269,0.00003609816,0.0006338867],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.00005068439,0.9969946,0.00002056679,0.00006087163,0.001032624,0.0006379811,0.001110093,0.00003543981,0.00005720983],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9895267,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999285,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2076015037","doi":"10.1080/10810730305733","title":"The Influence of Famous Athletes on Health Beliefs and Practices: Mark McGwire, Child Abuse Prevention, and Androstenedione","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Health Communication","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":171,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Lethbridge","funders":"","keywords":"Androstenedione; Public health; Athletes; HERO; Psychology; Identification (biology); Suicide prevention; Poison control; Medicine; Developmental psychology; Environmental health; Nursing","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04913537373552947,"gpt":0.3355131470912583,"spread":0.2863777733557289,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004222517,0.00009960603,0.0003012653,0.0000994505,0.001366608,0.00007963709,0.0001990121,0.00003325334,0.000009597639],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0005473628,0.0000677986,0.00003357755,0.00005249044,0.0002653446,0.0004212073,0.00002179608,0.0003951072,0.000001612584],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006087973,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003656761,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00032409,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00119044,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9975952,0.0008492978,0.0009908869,0.00008979873,0.000275151,0.000199656],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9951979,0.0007278007,0.003234964,0.000372083,0.0003292572,0.0001379888],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0005834855,0.001301422,0.01754149,0.00256428,0.0002118605,0.000002560722,0.2359937,0.0001554726,0.00003749859,0.5450266,0.01265765,0.183924],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002156375,0.004902245,0.0905253,0.0041817,0.00003751408,0.0001795486,0.01650667,0.00002884516,0.00002214049,0.01185992,0.8693616,0.0002380707],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.8943489,0.06555214,0.000007651572,0.03833145,0.0001538886,0.0004911583,0.000006920707,0.000008887605,0.001098995],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.8359947,0.1602997,0.000441438,0.003088056,0.00007360299,0.000007594762,0.000002924307,0.000009481643,0.00008252755],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.856704,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999335,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3120832668","doi":"10.3758/s13423-020-01853-1","title":"Memory and comprehension of narrative versus expository texts: A meta-analysis","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"review","venue":"Psychonomic Bulletin & Review","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":168,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Narrative; Psychology; Exposition (narrative); Comprehension; Recall; Variety (cybernetics); Cognitive psychology; Inclusion (mineral); Meta-analysis; Rhetorical modes; Reading comprehension; Content analysis; Linguistics; Social psychology; Reading (process); Literature; Mathematics education; Computer science; Social science; Artificial intelligence; Sociology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.3093630049887444,"gpt":0.4013004581357984,"spread":0.09193745314705404,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007929393,0.000603759,0.008273451,0.0002473753,0.0002045204,0.00006863438,0.0003538213,0.0001495413,0.03328928],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00005770128,0.0004258873,0.003508889,0.0001605124,0.0003147174,0.00004648877,0.00009640915,0.0004466679,0.0003847863],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00005951207,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002033545,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000135883,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00008427131,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9961235,0.0008207938,0.001770654,0.0007476694,0.0002457654,0.0002916174],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9967132,0.0006721859,0.001368046,0.0008909996,0.0001863534,0.0001692225],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00001461128,0.0001243505,7.256581e-8,0.1606565,0.1002117,0.000009945779,0.004283797,2.248762e-7,2.621593e-8,0.002453539,0.1520396,0.5802056],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0001267838,0.00005309019,6.600493e-8,0.01137795,0.2243405,0.000003577821,0.0003449542,8.607956e-8,2.627091e-8,0.000003702473,0.7634761,0.0002731035],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[0.000001331889,0.9896135,8.784622e-7,0.0006634753,0.0008669702,0.001246233,0.0001058885,0.00002283729,0.007478884],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.00000117451,0.995512,0.0001341083,0.001088259,0.0004085845,0.0004110466,0.0001570549,0.0000444524,0.002243291],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6114365,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9998193,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2100323005","doi":"10.1093/alcalc/agp003","title":"Alcohol Portrayal on Television Affects Actual Drinking Behaviour","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Alcohol and Alcoholism","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":166,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Queen's University","funders":"Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek","keywords":"Alcohol; Psychology; Alcohol consumption; Injury prevention; Poison control; Suicide prevention; Human factors and ergonomics; Alcohol intoxication; Alcohol advertising; Social psychology; Advertising; Medicine; Environmental health; Chemistry","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05358312923691573,"gpt":0.3012288697863595,"spread":0.2476457405494438,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003767359,0.000393294,0.0004334142,0.0002422768,0.0007713222,0.0003255924,0.0002434989,0.0001484202,0.000946608],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00004833756,0.0003182866,0.0001399895,0.00006846555,0.0002123109,0.000443417,0.00004647018,0.0004710805,0.0002795219],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003664547,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00005869535,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001504735,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001015368,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9977584,0.00006139719,0.0003868561,0.000574375,0.000492966,0.0007259959],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9988959,0.0001243955,0.0001670339,0.0003821444,0.00007480231,0.0003557232],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0002609174,0.0008297021,0.01063805,0.0001044366,0.0001019917,0.0004402362,0.04586672,0.00001395213,0.002255508,0.583382,0.03323774,0.3228688],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.007863822,0.004567838,0.312676,0.001339807,0.0003836841,0.0002071469,0.004721568,0.0001868035,0.004199178,0.01872685,0.6420413,0.003085975],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.941071,0.0003392172,0.000003329884,0.00261708,0.00082387,0.0004383306,0.00001947279,0.0002051631,0.05448258],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9870169,0.0002649555,0.00007376661,0.008344834,0.001885693,0.00002314018,0.00004394354,0.00003274663,0.002314006],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6088036,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999667,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2899546707","doi":"10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02158","title":"Are You Awed Yet? How Virtual Reality Gives Us Awe and Goose Bumps","year":2018,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Frontiers in Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":155,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Simon Fraser University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Simon Fraser University","keywords":"Psychology; Goose; Virtual reality; Feeling; Social psychology; Cognitive psychology; Human–computer interaction; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06125674247541663,"gpt":0.3251844891932755,"spread":0.2639277467178588,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003308358,0.0001630389,0.0003356997,0.0001957377,0.0002205543,0.00006428128,0.000195984,0.0001446945,0.0004214216],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00009726751,0.0001462137,0.00003613741,0.00005393138,0.001280578,0.0001834916,0.0000363267,0.0002549016,0.00006077092],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002963383,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002841507,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001674187,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001826237,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9986792,0.0001401132,0.0002444519,0.0004078267,0.0001119933,0.0004164733],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992575,0.0000337841,0.0001721404,0.0003424309,0.00006849349,0.0001256722],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"not_applicable","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0002404357,0.0001197205,0.1195562,0.00004007739,0.00003811095,0.00003619647,0.02629855,1.2556e-7,0.00002153352,0.01752375,0.7985708,0.03755453],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0009899442,0.0004040131,0.08305769,0.00004186019,0.0000124524,0.000007638121,0.008310177,0.00003107343,0.000009139918,0.01963503,0.88728,0.0002209424],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9157082,0.001521382,0.000801425,0.01995509,0.01527232,0.0004270811,0.0001116869,0.0001128764,0.04608989],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9776368,0.0008543466,0.00103748,0.01373205,0.002400486,0.00005043252,0.00002317539,0.00003406949,0.004231199],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.08870926,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5962421,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2009919835","doi":"10.1509/jmkr.2005.42.3.333","title":"Distinguishing between the Meanings of Music: When Background Music Affects Product Perceptions","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Marketing Research","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":148,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Embodied cognition; Meaning (existential); Perception; Context (archaeology); Psychology; Music and emotion; Musical; Music psychology; Cognitive psychology; Aesthetics; Computer science; Musicology; Music history; Art; Visual arts; Artificial intelligence","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.230446562209259,"gpt":0.3836256436059531,"spread":0.153179081396694,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaresearch","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.02928556,0.0001139068,0.0002990847,0.0002912642,0.0009292793,0.0002730576,0.0005673196,0.00003800124,0.002999021],"category_scores_gemma":[0.006096755,0.0000719573,0.0001281132,0.0001174584,0.0005087277,0.0003919097,0.0001310967,0.001258019,0.00003466068],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001356845,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002959773,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002176124,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0006440954,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9961712,0.001300184,0.0006013996,0.0001601795,0.001227163,0.000539817],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9935756,0.004443594,0.0004442552,0.0002643145,0.00112959,0.0001425999],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0006249388,0.0003210659,0.07505424,0.001413386,0.0002666975,0.00003463114,0.4055085,0.00003476839,0.001359865,0.009817715,0.364232,0.1413323],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.000831462,0.0005988941,0.1855161,0.002031343,0.00009996393,0.00004800399,0.0699553,0.00009758561,0.00009529095,0.002152268,0.7382742,0.0002996233],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9630535,0.0003706334,0.000005054614,0.006372067,0.0002543307,0.0002221207,0.000005512964,0.000009842697,0.02970693],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9899518,0.00008654686,0.0004465784,0.0001495837,0.00761644,0.000004657337,0.00000152166,0.00002096421,0.001721891],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.3740422,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9995548,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4323045013","doi":"10.1093/jcr/ucad014","title":"Machine Talk: How Verbal Embodiment in Conversational AI Shapes Consumer–Brand Relationships","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Consumer Research","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":148,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Alberta","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council; Canada Research Chairs; Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung","keywords":"Perception; Interface (matter); Psychology; Loyalty; Advertising; Brand management; Brand loyalty; Conceptual model; Social psychology; Cognitive psychology; Business; Marketing; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2426835687121139,"gpt":0.3965617826035696,"spread":0.1538782138914556,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00432643,0.0001132678,0.0002809128,0.0009911916,0.0004726656,0.0002397782,0.0002458738,0.00006925286,0.002948284],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0006866178,0.00009204203,0.00008413607,0.0002535195,0.0005075985,0.0005032875,0.00005709344,0.001323354,0.0003923828],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001281072,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0006696106,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002220244,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001445931,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9972175,0.0005000695,0.0005244494,0.0001485312,0.001150984,0.0004584581],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9974892,0.00128801,0.0001688192,0.0001193386,0.0007168952,0.0002178042],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.001035663,0.0004840188,0.3504147,0.0004661462,0.0004150018,0.001004226,0.05961663,0.0001093161,0.0004175816,0.2319588,0.3448028,0.009275069],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.003038821,0.0002998647,0.04307323,0.0002954708,0.00002803565,0.00005455238,0.01005428,0.001187486,0.00007033884,0.01175113,0.9299195,0.0002272317],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9536815,0.003741264,0.000008116,0.0338525,0.0007354011,0.0004481035,0.00007795016,0.00003059625,0.007424608],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9956067,0.001152741,0.00002706337,0.0002970394,0.0003358765,0.00001489352,0.00001612221,0.00001504417,0.002534539],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.5851167,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9979631,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1991820896","doi":"10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01939.x","title":"Smoking in Movies, Implicit Associations of Smoking With the Self, and Intentions to Smoke","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Psychological Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":142,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Waterloo","funders":"","keywords":"Psychology; Smoke; Narrative; Implicit attitude; Developmental psychology; Quit smoking; Task (project management); Social psychology; Clinical psychology; Smoking cessation; Medicine","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1094054928687639,"gpt":0.3825730786322397,"spread":0.2731675857634758,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002199998,0.00005800989,0.0000975134,0.0001117212,0.0004336207,0.00007342345,0.0002361624,0.00002279193,0.00008775209],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001767141,0.000031299,0.00001410502,0.0003188399,0.0005281333,0.0001360192,0.00004493582,0.0001471943,0.000002179479],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004736192,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002680525,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0004535262,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003041432,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9989851,0.00002237065,0.0001857075,0.0001991547,0.000310555,0.0002971885],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994187,0.0001949995,0.00007287043,0.0001282692,0.00009996147,0.00008515771],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00001761845,0.0001714854,0.3439203,0.0000085351,0.000006336954,0.000003909511,0.04010595,0.000007627826,0.0007317673,0.6067035,0.0002479234,0.008075071],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0001038462,0.0001350543,0.9906627,0.00002191763,0.000003919228,0.000001767728,0.003579502,0.000005511786,0.00002460124,0.001832255,0.003571339,0.0000575829],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9627656,0.0000228214,0.0001028762,0.002422306,0.0001074893,0.0001582212,0.00000422699,0.00001991992,0.03439651],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9974558,0.0000103218,0.0001775355,0.002256375,0.00005285381,0.00001082947,3.304617e-7,0.000002001432,0.0000339623],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6467424,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3335103,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2107963501","doi":"10.1016/s1499-4046(06)60056-0","title":"A Test of Conversational and Testimonial Messages versus Didactic Presentations of Nutrition Information","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":128,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":false,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":true,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"National Cancer Institute","keywords":"Testimonial; Conversation; CLARITY; Identification (biology); Test (biology); Psychology; Narrative; Psychological intervention; Computer science; Advertising; Communication; Linguistics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04343592251833962,"gpt":0.3280361189729304,"spread":0.2846001964545908,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0001644528,0.00006225012,0.0001411799,0.0002497433,0.00009920108,0.00004411728,0.00003144099,0.00003580627,0.000299742],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0002578287,0.00005762552,0.0000354736,0.0000507908,0.0001495531,0.0009170933,0.000003256504,0.00008563448,0.000001483641],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001806734,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002073437,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003636657,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00001538125,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9991899,0.00003680483,0.0004732551,0.00004447078,0.000193229,0.00006231524],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.99845,0.0002263546,0.000522759,0.00004467774,0.0006860203,0.00007013842],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000928554,0.0822184,0.2753347,0.007664829,0.0002119045,0.00000569798,0.140382,0.00000666356,0.01109279,0.3717591,0.05418267,0.05621263],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.01785153,0.004181681,0.5607554,0.001314399,0.001246354,0.0002663083,0.1786794,0.00003999005,0.008525835,0.006150119,0.2204487,0.0005402656],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9968596,0.0004075526,0.00002351943,0.0007472996,0.0007576621,0.0002837158,0.00004500729,0.000003859724,0.0008717954],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9981306,0.0005288417,0.0009608149,0.00005454929,0.0002000211,0.00004846972,0.00002951656,0.0000031016,0.00004410388],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.365609,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3281964,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2145990230","doi":"10.1002/per.406","title":"Pleasures and subjective well‐being","year":2001,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Journal of Personality","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":127,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Pleasure; Psychology; Sensation seeking; Extraversion and introversion; Facet (psychology); Life satisfaction; Social psychology; Well-being; Happiness; Association (psychology); Developmental psychology; Personality; Big Five personality traits; Psychotherapist","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05852204709543291,"gpt":0.2644813011208607,"spread":0.2059592540254278,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001425709,0.00008100027,0.0001511031,0.00005791544,0.0002284013,0.000090163,0.000102513,0.000007458897,0.001337377],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00007519094,0.00006111726,0.00006472094,0.00001927926,0.0001761896,0.0002208211,0.00001675046,0.0002266735,0.0000675062],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002048071,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00003913516,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00008225335,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001215556,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9989852,0.000293596,0.0002793478,0.00008371002,0.0002093576,0.0001488124],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993815,0.00006107904,0.0001936817,0.00006395071,0.0001657644,0.0001339744],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0005344351,0.000226431,0.309765,0.0001374827,0.0002085997,0.00162006,0.53563,0.00000407207,0.0002600816,0.1006066,0.01757445,0.03343273],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006443652,0.0003619092,0.2729316,0.0001194632,0.00003538464,0.0002270737,0.01055336,0.000007611194,0.00001547737,0.001353009,0.7135971,0.0001536577],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.7993711,0.000371257,0.00002029577,0.0009521496,0.0002630829,0.00002776263,0.000001824728,0.000007862503,0.1989846],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9959201,0.0001933893,0.00005422374,0.0009993139,0.001654903,1.360012e-7,4.08492e-7,0.00001031059,0.001167275],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6960227,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9995756,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3044753138","doi":"10.2196/20186","title":"What Media Helps, What Media Hurts: A Mixed Methods Survey Study of Coping with COVID-19 Using the Media Repertoire Framework and the Appraisal Theory of Stress","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Medical Internet Research","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":123,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"Concordia University; McGill University; Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital; University of Waterloo","funders":"Concordia University","keywords":"Coping (psychology); Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); Psychology; Pandemic; Social media; Snowball sampling; Distancing; Social psychology; Medicine; Clinical psychology; Disease; Political science; Infectious disease (medical specialty)","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.3455128061253053,"gpt":0.5134408021449905,"spread":0.1679279960196853,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaresearch","sts","research_integrity","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["metaresearch"],"category_scores_codex":[0.0410242,0.0002335851,0.001010897,0.000252247,0.0002915239,0.0005584526,0.001560088,0.0002060128,0.001567634],"category_scores_gemma":[0.06291397,0.0001054917,0.0001246177,0.0003058239,0.004681548,0.000713782,0.0005109903,0.002765968,0.000001557627],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006660391,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00130389,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.002210393,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.007972182,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9829272,0.01036697,0.001458462,0.0003198585,0.004415462,0.0005120496],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.8893446,0.1055595,0.001249115,0.0006360523,0.001780747,0.001430036],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"qualitative","study_design_scores_codex":[0.004133719,0.0003738298,0.002785684,0.0004970415,0.0005358581,0.0001863747,0.9450777,0.00001525013,0.00001114611,0.02360163,0.003626682,0.0191551],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.004102959,0.001587867,0.001301974,0.003631687,0.0001521586,0.00007993251,0.9777727,0.001077716,0.0001354463,0.004218466,0.005743575,0.0001955462],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":"qualitative","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9440213,0.0145323,0.003373627,0.03476708,0.002557323,0.000674404,0.00002026518,0.00001134247,0.00004229742],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9865549,0.008423827,0.0004093306,0.002654588,0.00188843,0.0000165773,0.00000537566,0.00003390824,0.0000130729],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.09519248,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9995347,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2321725901","doi":"10.1037/a0037999","title":"The art in fiction: From indirect communication to changes of the self.","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":112,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Art; Psychology; Aesthetics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04126832196761974,"gpt":0.2961030428938927,"spread":0.254834720926273,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009495183,0.00006184143,0.0001617698,0.00002897619,0.0003000099,0.00001645057,0.0002269504,0.00003374787,0.00003569938],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0000643021,0.00003017212,0.00002763663,0.00003666909,0.0008676046,0.00002786916,0.00004714861,0.000129841,0.000007729544],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000003957748,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000009191175,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002529967,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.006780338,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9991869,0.0003708141,0.0001694546,0.00008787205,0.00008561269,0.00009934616],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987654,0.0005791011,0.0001379168,0.000456395,0.00004079959,0.00002037845],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0003337475,0.0002702757,0.01526432,0.00002328477,0.00004774068,2.195633e-7,0.1954557,0.000007974176,0.00005707466,0.7439741,0.00857102,0.0359946],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001112331,0.0002665619,0.09213676,0.0001124255,0.00003569132,0.000003574989,0.002055348,0.00008426666,0.0003109942,0.06671839,0.8370684,0.00009525973],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.8928161,0.0003301944,0.000009955837,0.05256249,0.0001836968,0.0002510538,0.000006828005,0.000008591583,0.05383106],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9971713,0.0008305301,0.00004493164,0.001656262,0.00004688398,0.00002537743,0.000001555785,0.000003868804,0.0002193322],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8284974,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3783588,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1965899219","doi":"10.1348/1355325041719338","title":"Seeing things differently: The viewing time alternative to penile plethysmography","year":2004,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Legal and Criminological Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":110,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"University of Victoria","funders":"","keywords":"Unavailability; Computer science; Usability; Set (abstract data type); Stimulus (psychology); Accidental; Virtual reality; Human–computer interaction; Psychology; Cognitive psychology; Engineering; Acoustics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.09827002426887646,"gpt":0.3213425209004552,"spread":0.2230724966315787,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0001535874,0.0001660883,0.0002415996,0.00007807698,0.000486263,0.0001160857,0.0002667871,0.00007869573,0.001078626],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00003982499,0.0000917217,0.00007297372,0.00004009189,0.0004677445,0.0001708952,0.0000800501,0.0003852796,0.0003819042],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001279319,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001141611,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003906548,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00004872069,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9988194,0.00006953112,0.000231429,0.0003470124,0.0001293809,0.0004032359],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.999497,0.00009386563,0.0000593934,0.0001844565,0.00004064474,0.0001246197],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001170894,0.0001971947,0.0004179768,0.00002969038,0.00004186917,0.00006645315,0.0784395,0.000005913365,0.0008964615,0.8983573,0.003808321,0.01762216],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001094766,0.001422387,0.02029517,0.00005602345,0.00005343439,0.00006205551,0.002919434,0.00001156193,0.0001073307,0.1218107,0.8517435,0.0004236854],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9297148,0.0003913035,0.0001185317,0.02742481,0.0005394427,0.0002408453,0.000006839291,0.00008472694,0.04147869],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9455723,0.00006079378,0.0001069368,0.05316983,0.0004886593,0.00004139005,0.000004241836,0.000008406862,0.0005474095],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8479351,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9998345,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2029561873","doi":"10.1177/1948550612460059","title":"Can You See How Happy We Are? Facebook Images and Relationship Satisfaction","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Social Psychological and Personality Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":109,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Closeness; Psychology; Feeling; Romance; Social psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2208445250288977,"gpt":0.3708516498325367,"spread":0.150007124803639,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007975693,0.00009616903,0.0001256946,0.00003945976,0.001669713,0.0002251885,0.00007473049,0.00006059554,0.0006098275],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001313636,0.00007024986,0.00002413518,0.00006234893,0.002295888,0.0004760101,0.00002589778,0.000201769,0.00002771553],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002616437,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002063183,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003444464,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0004368218,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9989842,0.00007178008,0.0001026483,0.0002520887,0.0002545388,0.000334707],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9995131,0.00009720425,0.00007578785,0.00006315266,0.00005453762,0.000196221],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00001652519,0.00004807043,0.7111369,0.00003805706,0.000003528773,7.70431e-7,0.07619327,1.645409e-8,0.0002695139,0.1924361,0.004236147,0.01562119],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00009963391,0.00004457383,0.9636136,0.000008038503,0.000005818771,0.000003553538,0.01126846,0.00000180722,0.000002955025,0.007750602,0.01709073,0.0001102058],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9543501,0.0002323469,0.000006502365,0.03187102,0.0003119211,0.0001669357,0.00004407125,0.00003667794,0.01298039],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9959382,0.00006638274,0.00004438454,0.001507779,0.0007092802,0.00001648443,0.000001391196,0.00000264116,0.001713477],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.2524768,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.99963,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2810785310","doi":"10.1177/0963721417749654","title":"Stories and the Promotion of Social Cognition","year":2018,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Current Directions in Psychological Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":107,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Psychology; Cognition; Social cognition; Tying; Theory of mind; Neuropsychology; Metacognition; Cognitive psychology; Social psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1931900937908591,"gpt":0.4557424100977219,"spread":0.2625523163068628,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007090453,0.00004064051,0.00007445185,0.0000711235,0.0006844431,0.00004509704,0.0001023528,0.00001502,0.0003617229],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001751031,0.00002284509,0.00001535481,0.0001952509,0.006210964,0.0001575237,0.00002051066,0.0000974346,0.00001358101],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0000148769,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001565235,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00002574019,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001943184,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9993855,0.00004992752,0.0001399299,0.0001498227,0.0001487718,0.0001260492],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9996824,0.00004792407,0.0000558327,0.00005808748,0.0001317166,0.00002408976],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00004770006,0.0002702643,0.001313543,0.00001273536,0.00000124128,8.933316e-8,0.03768911,3.945726e-8,0.0001056613,0.8380528,0.0007355828,0.1217712],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.002973698,0.001168413,0.4485871,0.0002020638,0.00003838542,0.000009784341,0.01069194,0.0002322245,0.000516885,0.2121883,0.3229864,0.0004047857],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9449472,0.000140188,0.00002467388,0.00113145,0.002137559,0.0001889818,0.000004455339,0.00002245737,0.05140307],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9993518,0.0001008013,0.00001432947,0.0000620255,0.0003881065,0.00003141553,6.319539e-7,9.407552e-7,0.00004992095],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6258645,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9964936,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2159163442","doi":"10.1186/2049-3258-73-3","title":"Biological, psychological and social processes that explain celebrities’ influence on patients’ health-related behaviors","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Archives of Public Health","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":106,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McMaster University; University of Ottawa","funders":"","keywords":"PsycINFO; Cognitive dissonance; Psychology; Social psychology; Discipline; Narrative; Public relations; Sociology; MEDLINE; Social science; Political science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2519426335501994,"gpt":0.3503309662168628,"spread":0.09838833266666347,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009942834,0.0002126625,0.000510976,0.0002196311,0.0005856804,0.00009208814,0.0002674856,0.00007410591,0.0001152672],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003337287,0.0001613643,0.00005156658,0.00008405519,0.001114196,0.0002884613,0.00007275554,0.0003420038,0.0000191019],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00005193957,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0006858485,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.001015111,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000392908,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9972803,0.0005048258,0.0007097146,0.0004021594,0.0003587003,0.0007443122],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9982871,0.0003203719,0.0004792323,0.0001807834,0.0001294419,0.000603065],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0001557975,0.002253049,0.1270186,0.0009825942,0.00003218184,0.000004808718,0.4985207,0.000001471274,0.000003382169,0.2143422,0.0116037,0.1450815],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.005021452,0.01617576,0.5568795,0.0004848593,0.000009374864,0.00001235073,0.07265921,0.00001235513,0.0000099534,0.02242455,0.3253504,0.0009602595],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9778318,0.0004569596,0.000007343146,0.01630305,0.0002044179,0.0005214649,0.0001309159,0.00009863541,0.004445448],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9912924,0.0005602894,0.0001350732,0.007566619,0.0001216403,0.00005890999,0.0001261777,0.00001524636,0.0001236441],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4298609,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6580247,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1921490643","doi":"10.1002/cb.389","title":"Mixing emotions: The use of humor in fear advertising","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Consumer Behaviour","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":104,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McGill University","funders":"","keywords":"Persuasion; Psychology; Arousal; Fear appeal; Vulnerability (computing); Social psychology; Advertising; Computer security; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.151121362886165,"gpt":0.3186918484526286,"spread":0.1675704855664636,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0005608638,0.00007263419,0.000197595,0.0001499744,0.0001236492,0.00004915692,0.0001124068,0.00002770289,0.0005476829],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001111688,0.00004642614,0.000107932,0.0000366521,0.0001342596,0.0006580234,0.00001580385,0.0002766772,0.00001473643],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003242533,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008453961,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0004013089,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002899498,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9988905,0.00008761664,0.0005504698,0.00003936337,0.0002229117,0.0002091728],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990989,0.0001571488,0.0003822294,0.0001114938,0.0001697656,0.00008044878],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003696506,0.0002742662,0.9265601,0.00003993595,0.00003885487,0.00001696678,0.05505669,0.00001127356,0.0002373447,0.005232475,0.003739762,0.008755373],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0009806976,0.0001382246,0.8345116,0.0007387471,0.0002363522,0.0001352508,0.01031846,0.00001360063,0.0002921735,0.0002251144,0.1521995,0.0002102107],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9969965,0.001569509,0.0000151147,0.0004222585,0.0007250324,0.00008411525,0.00000578188,0.000003289009,0.0001783714],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9987134,0.0001915864,0.0002745331,0.0002819225,0.0003177718,0.00000146165,5.084748e-7,0.000008464694,0.0002103492],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.1484598,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5996743,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1983529390","doi":"10.1177/0961000610390992","title":"The importance of pleasure reading in the lives of young teens: Self-identification, self-construction and self-awareness","year":2011,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Librarianship and Information Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":103,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"Dalhousie University","funders":"University of Toronto","keywords":"Pleasure; Reading (process); Salience (neuroscience); Psychology; Personal identity; Identity (music); Social psychology; Everyday life; Developmental psychology; Self-concept; Aesthetics; Cognitive psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04565344191007474,"gpt":0.251537956404161,"spread":0.2058845144940862,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002591021,0.00005739322,0.0001167754,0.0002204426,0.0004105278,0.0002591104,0.0002823015,0.00002176556,0.00001184103],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001444742,0.00003168222,0.00002044954,0.0002025274,0.0004150348,0.008822751,0.00001829892,0.0001231622,6.219905e-7],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001240201,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003169086,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003222188,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002813442,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9986882,0.00005262713,0.0007437428,0.00004972279,0.0003565178,0.000109234],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9984072,0.000127228,0.0009594124,0.0001158842,0.0003474775,0.00004277558],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00001911931,0.00002730311,0.2473859,0.0001120195,0.000009011435,3.491039e-7,0.5035249,8.955074e-7,0.00002955614,0.2474222,0.00006004508,0.001408721],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004952394,0.0002425752,0.7398925,0.0001986327,0.00004193781,0.0001515785,0.2412219,0.0004632021,0.0009766951,0.007959924,0.008216603,0.0001391372],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9905022,0.0001879496,0.00005357257,0.0003294548,0.0002983369,0.0001251582,0.000003349939,0.000008037419,0.008491963],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9980984,0.0009880795,0.0007088065,0.0001370623,0.00005931178,0.000002198946,3.822439e-7,0.000001443987,0.000004357621],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4925066,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6396282,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2161462471","doi":"10.1080/10410236.2010.496830","title":"Parasocial Interaction and Identification: Social Change Processes for Effective Health Interventions","year":2010,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Health Communication","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":102,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Lethbridge","funders":"","keywords":"Psychological intervention; Identification (biology); Health communication; Psychology; Behavior change; Social relation; Social psychology; Communication","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2155556781640077,"gpt":0.4561596462497867,"spread":0.240603968085779,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00108788,0.00009525728,0.0002110635,0.0000970183,0.002109681,0.0001374953,0.0001511682,0.00004773398,0.00007053972],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001543811,0.00009700832,0.00005318503,0.0000545773,0.0001779297,0.0004708664,0.00003510821,0.0002901231,0.00001675749],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0000900265,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001800123,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.001796414,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0419938,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9988881,0.0001789678,0.0004569561,0.0001660997,0.0000894865,0.0002204432],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986103,0.000270334,0.0005203863,0.000226224,0.0002786172,0.00009420087],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00004957062,0.0002433867,0.0004943329,0.003442637,0.00002006947,2.145051e-8,0.2518951,5.586014e-8,0.0000120973,0.3403511,0.009530659,0.3939609],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001167744,0.0006802161,0.06868768,0.000645152,0.00003038492,0.000004741408,0.01555438,0.0001508874,0.00001925017,0.01663527,0.8960862,0.0003380771],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.3752292,0.01477968,0.002219032,0.5801541,0.006062866,0.01639185,0.0006730104,0.0007210042,0.003769257],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9920009,0.001142135,0.0003070374,0.003067341,0.001017787,0.002011021,0.0003174026,0.00001599083,0.0001203384],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8865556,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9991894,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2036750069","doi":"10.1177/0146167202238373","title":"Watching Your Troubles Away: Television Viewing as a Stimulus for Subjective Self-Awareness","year":2003,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":96,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"National Institute of Mental Health","keywords":"Psychology; Feeling; Mood; Social psychology; Stimulus (psychology); Cognitive psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1040054938353324,"gpt":0.3739610514434163,"spread":0.2699555576080839,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009643704,0.0001858798,0.0003608238,0.00005228184,0.001609839,0.00009581867,0.00009767734,0.0001531554,0.001422739],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001002602,0.0001699721,0.000123734,0.0000259749,0.0002634721,0.00007307681,0.00001498343,0.0002512823,0.0000753868],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004112698,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00009060353,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0006104024,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001734785,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9985003,0.0002545454,0.0002768583,0.0003998017,0.0001515642,0.000416861],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993467,0.0002299637,0.0001135152,0.00009532219,0.0001270791,0.00008736592],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0003751374,0.0004142179,0.005163496,0.0004171948,0.0001892762,0.00001095647,0.5150347,7.038456e-7,0.00004826002,0.4600314,0.01206755,0.006247128],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001403755,0.000221622,0.004344149,0.00003381918,0.00006293398,0.00001271734,0.02116187,0.0000064991,0.000007467443,0.01435024,0.9581159,0.000279032],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9642953,0.0005874943,0.0002269344,0.01651582,0.0007021574,0.0004653146,0.00004862288,0.0000958557,0.01706252],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9881582,0.0001458091,0.0004036359,0.009442912,0.0009687135,0.00009440864,0.00001950983,0.00002269585,0.0007440645],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9460483,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9996899,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2562114972","doi":"10.1017/prp.2016.8","title":"Elicited Awe Decreases Aggression","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":95,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus; University of British Columbia","funders":"","keywords":"Aggression; Psychology; Social psychology; Amusement; Feeling; Happiness; Recall; Mediation; Cognitive psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06283541061784591,"gpt":0.3423195584372289,"spread":0.279484147819383,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0004074817,0.000106899,0.0002634735,0.0002442344,0.0001225487,0.00002651906,0.0001924237,0.00007105714,0.005446704],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0001417165,0.00005528771,0.0001090519,0.00003282854,0.0002458717,0.0002118227,0.00001023116,0.0001603402,0.0003613045],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002468336,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00006870493,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001121895,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000230871,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9987922,0.0001051445,0.0005336888,0.0001211518,0.0001974179,0.0002503388],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987103,0.0001706063,0.0005106456,0.0001928324,0.0002308176,0.0001847917],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"not_applicable","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0008199627,0.0005267673,0.01470798,0.00004178964,0.0001204929,0.0003169141,0.01508116,2.763069e-7,0.01631031,0.04330888,0.6618856,0.2468798],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001264373,0.000685475,0.002965392,0.0004648707,0.00002113175,0.0002378764,0.001027051,3.646576e-7,0.0002293206,0.008830927,0.9841549,0.0001182783],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.8978732,0.002222154,0.000406491,0.01637732,0.006857349,0.0001241126,0.0000170521,0.00003672327,0.07608566],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.988984,0.003167579,0.0001811768,0.002163616,0.002908656,0.000002900638,0.000001086685,0.00001661221,0.00257438],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.3222693,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9954625,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2468284253","doi":"10.1177/1359105316656243","title":"Changing health-promoting behaviours through narrative interventions: A systematic review","year":2016,"lang":"en","type":"review","venue":"Journal of Health Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":94,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Psychological intervention; Narrative; Intervention (counseling); Inclusion (mineral); Psychology; Narrative review; Public health; Narrative inquiry; Health psychology; Health promotion; Public health interventions; Clinical psychology; Medicine; Social psychology; Psychotherapist; Nursing; Psychiatry","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.3258589394473843,"gpt":0.5359076758139398,"spread":0.2100487363665556,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.009353738,0.0004986358,0.007154902,0.0007320562,0.0007155059,0.00005687444,0.0006566733,0.0001783321,0.001190323],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0004426648,0.0002973202,0.001559333,0.0001828056,0.0001928199,0.0003387749,0.00003968646,0.001211187,0.0001911901],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000522735,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.001530672,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00002204556,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00005576654,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9878248,0.003379247,0.007044401,0.0003667767,0.000441105,0.0009436619],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9841426,0.0003659759,0.01426883,0.0005162155,0.0004051346,0.0003012526],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"systematic_review","study_design_gemma":"systematic_review","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000001915452,0.00009636056,1.386365e-7,0.8318822,0.0001600407,0.00001851548,0.02918052,1.494747e-9,8.497788e-10,0.001620134,0.02340213,0.113638],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0001354298,0.0006449907,9.208686e-8,0.5471053,0.0002637428,0.0004475742,0.0009886087,9.017344e-9,9.429713e-10,0.0001874634,0.4501071,0.0001197244],"study_design_candidate":"systematic_review","study_design_consensus":"systematic_review","genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[6.579313e-7,0.9688455,0.0001339133,0.02342116,0.004201067,0.002909303,0.00005775831,0.00002691729,0.0004036693],"genre_scores_gemma":[9.537755e-7,0.9690165,0.0001179069,0.02868414,0.001374982,0.0001928278,0.0000194853,0.00006551242,0.0005276795],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.426705,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999479,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4327723573","doi":"10.1007/s11747-023-00928-4","title":"Feeling the values: How pride and awe differentially enhance consumers’ sustainable behavioral intentions","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":86,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Alberta","funders":"National Natural Science Foundation of China; Monash University","keywords":"Pride; Value (mathematics); Feeling; Consumption (sociology); Psychology; Preference; Social psychology; Consumer behaviour; Marketing; Business; Sociology; Economics; Political science; Microeconomics; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05406998898850282,"gpt":0.3274833223870383,"spread":0.2734133333985355,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.009668386,0.00008457527,0.0001676454,0.0001726825,0.001311155,0.0002468818,0.0008364997,0.00002887138,0.00004228326],"category_scores_gemma":[0.002216778,0.00004454392,0.00008783418,0.0002375488,0.00172335,0.0005198393,0.0002454294,0.0004617786,0.000001628607],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004086485,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002375305,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003346333,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00001124149,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9982099,0.0002168909,0.0003647156,0.0001226757,0.0007344925,0.0003513322],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9983022,0.0006055688,0.0006122335,0.0001065522,0.0002913261,0.00008209002],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.001159038,0.000548785,0.1633004,0.002683571,0.0003148062,0.00005185036,0.3402815,0.0002597408,0.1958509,0.1785807,0.06955558,0.04741312],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001091995,0.0003650397,0.6998177,0.003054118,0.0004102575,0.0001333776,0.2090534,0.001204965,0.01292933,0.01700482,0.05433505,0.0005999561],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9806405,0.000252036,0.000008712404,0.01792127,0.0004271231,0.0001321944,0.000001878117,0.000009802226,0.0006065011],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9959595,0.0003416856,0.0000764555,0.0002720579,0.0001828138,0.000002306379,4.924337e-8,0.000005417553,0.003159734],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.5365173,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.999989,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2015803680","doi":"10.1136/bmj.g7346","title":"Televised medical talk shows--what they recommend and the evidence to support their recommendations: a prospective observational study","year":2014,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"BMJ","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":84,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Health Sciences Centre; University of British Columbia; University of Alberta","funders":"","keywords":"Observational study; Mainstream; Medicine; Evidence-based medicine; Family medicine; Evidence-based practice; Confidence interval; Psychology; Alternative medicine","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2318128900856786,"gpt":0.3899400219650899,"spread":0.1581271318794113,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003561972,0.0001375438,0.0002431863,0.00005169295,0.0005215344,0.0003345321,0.0002610235,0.00003527659,0.004144393],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001597848,0.00007757726,0.00004147768,0.00003922053,0.0001836405,0.0005861429,0.0001025119,0.0002040391,0.00009479314],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003346693,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001534948,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002991272,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.005863299,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9983462,0.0003455089,0.0004242811,0.0002651147,0.0004021345,0.0002167799],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9976724,0.001583851,0.0001228059,0.0002956168,0.0001720462,0.0001532842],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000492734,0.0004338255,0.03766369,0.00007122439,0.0001353891,0.000006777672,0.3661217,0.000001914896,0.00000396536,0.2754541,0.1602195,0.1593952],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.003304711,0.001652281,0.04902828,0.0007147999,0.00005983571,0.00002023623,0.09383157,0.0005427198,0.00001067834,0.02659702,0.8237701,0.000467778],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.5539366,0.0002340257,0.00007417353,0.4244097,0.001600964,0.005163122,0.00002631095,0.0001068152,0.01444826],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9716488,0.0002326211,0.0001199155,0.02407901,0.001424833,0.0009534249,0.00001328525,0.00001418805,0.001513887],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.6635506,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.996766,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2576846872","doi":"10.1186/s13643-016-0395-1","title":"Celebrities’ impact on health-related knowledge, attitudes, behaviors, and status outcomes: protocol for a systematic review, meta-analysis, and meta-regression analysis","year":2017,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Systematic Reviews","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":80,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Canadian Obesity Network; McMaster University; University of Alberta; Hamilton Health Sciences; University of Toronto; McMaster University Medical Centre; University of British Columbia; University of Ottawa","funders":"Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Norges Forskningsråd; Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation","keywords":"CINAHL; PsycINFO; Medicine; Meta-analysis; MEDLINE; Public health; Health promotion; Social media; Psychological intervention; Nursing","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2743039381860763,"gpt":0.4899588092967287,"spread":0.2156548711106524,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["metaepi_narrow","metaepi_broad","sts","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.01086875,0.0008789611,0.01802127,0.0005648993,0.001376569,0.0007644204,0.0004949957,0.00010553,0.001164406],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001875916,0.0003567482,0.005065965,0.0002263757,0.0002007582,0.0004030235,0.00008908097,0.0002366356,0.00007383926],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001363954,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000137292,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.001309571,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.003817442,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9905727,0.002633466,0.004823814,0.0007391979,0.0005907135,0.0006401298],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9896556,0.001025655,0.006156898,0.002328404,0.0003527282,0.0004807129],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"systematic_review","study_design_gemma":"meta_analysis","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000005773374,0.0001135086,0.000353644,0.8596345,0.1340819,0.000001741389,0.002681103,4.253504e-7,8.960679e-8,0.001344519,0.001770853,0.00001198197],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0005223159,0.0003245519,0.0004510831,0.07509851,0.9194008,0.000005628671,0.0002951342,0.00006626263,3.666329e-7,0.0000855849,0.003256724,0.0004930075],"study_design_candidate":"meta_analysis","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"protocol","genre_gemma":"protocol","genre_scores_codex":[0.0002102815,0.2181886,0.00008160789,0.001103078,0.0001043913,0.7790243,0.0004339619,0.0000825366,0.0007712304],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.01037416,0.00444925,0.0002316244,0.001080335,0.00005093764,0.9779649,0.00008467472,0.00005807282,0.005706059],"genre_candidate":"protocol","genre_consensus":"protocol","teacher_disagreement_score":0.7853189,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999235,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3087329599","doi":"10.1080/17439760.2020.1818808","title":"Awe and the interconnected self","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"The Journal of Positive Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":77,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"York University","funders":"","keywords":"Prosocial behavior; Psychology; Expansive; Scholarship; Unrest; Instinct; Social psychology; Cognitive psychology; Process (computing); Self; Developmental psychology; Politics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04534786401368867,"gpt":0.3023533115485553,"spread":0.2570054475348666,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0006778168,0.00006122514,0.0001671907,0.00002561611,0.0001653664,0.00002542446,0.0001897631,0.00002023295,0.0004213367],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00006913346,0.00002645838,0.00004237828,0.00002184162,0.0004693755,0.00007591162,0.00002155796,0.0003091848,0.0000396231],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000005359978,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001886173,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00002548537,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00003129138,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9991134,0.0004162678,0.0002367593,0.00004846013,0.00007730463,0.0001077763],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991705,0.0003808741,0.0001940535,0.00006716439,0.0001250852,0.0000622644],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.001788787,0.00005882374,0.0002777483,0.00001946199,0.0002709314,0.00002947405,0.7313224,9.489916e-7,0.000550232,0.2311805,0.02895868,0.005541969],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.01995092,0.008384048,0.04469974,0.0002784118,0.00104503,0.002234836,0.09161985,0.0002542402,0.0004679192,0.06664157,0.7638348,0.0005887026],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.7518243,0.001264377,0.0002665747,0.2192707,0.000701381,0.0001699439,0.000006420788,0.00001277008,0.02648357],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9548278,0.0004539437,0.00002869815,0.04363871,0.0009905114,9.178871e-7,2.553174e-7,0.000005073121,0.00005407516],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.734876,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.4613342,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2109565258","doi":"10.1123/jsep.22.4.283","title":"Inactivity May Be Hazardous to Your Image: The Effects of Exercise Participation on Impression Formation","year":2000,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":77,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"","keywords":"Psychology; Presentational and representational acting; Social psychology; Personality; Impression formation; Developmental psychology; Clinical psychology; Social perception; Perception","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.03526895849502498,"gpt":0.3415544036406822,"spread":0.3062854451456573,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0003252986,0.0001056364,0.0003299649,0.0001320583,0.0001590446,0.00003055825,0.0001105939,0.00005800074,0.0005154588],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00001125945,0.00006429532,0.00006593575,0.0000415387,0.0001057104,0.0003494712,0.000009220514,0.0001994107,0.00002582422],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00001499662,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002160605,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00005643148,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002094961,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9990603,0.0000128479,0.0004470517,0.00009801858,0.0002004116,0.0001813677],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992709,0.00002689502,0.0003083872,0.0001558019,0.0001217179,0.0001162798],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"design_other","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.006436768,0.0009869915,0.00921774,0.00067291,0.00003614134,0.00008590593,0.1265594,0.00002183588,0.001857898,0.00173812,0.03917059,0.8132157],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00549488,0.006655021,0.6337567,0.003759808,0.0005924312,0.000143654,0.006759628,0.00008552537,0.01232458,0.004419499,0.3253498,0.0006584767],"study_design_candidate":"design_other","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9942564,0.0003046264,0.000007390983,0.002149726,0.0005973506,0.0002752481,0.00000225385,0.000006543158,0.002400441],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9958755,0.002636672,0.00004871422,0.0008489228,0.0002429787,0.00001620782,0.00000222241,0.00000809637,0.0003206414],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8125572,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5643913,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2064213341","doi":"10.1080/03630240903238776","title":"Risk Messages About HPV, Cervical Cancer, and the HPV Vaccine Gardasil: A Content Analysis of Canadian and U.S. National Newspaper Articles","year":2009,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Women & Health","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":73,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"University of Waterloo","funders":"","keywords":"Gardasil; Cervical cancer; Worry; Human papillomavirus; Newspaper; Medicine; Human papillomavirus vaccine; Public health; Family medicine; Cancer; Media studies; Internal medicine; Sociology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04997850373444472,"gpt":0.2896545088106447,"spread":0.2396760050762,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0009327229,0.0001161353,0.0004385281,0.0004067702,0.0004942882,0.00006951942,0.00008460656,0.00003104086,0.001439934],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00005676135,0.0000748973,0.00004611002,0.0002103335,0.0001723036,0.0000880454,0.00001192141,0.0001478327,0.000002844135],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000157489,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0004946484,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.4548979,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.8137373,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9986419,0.0001127884,0.0003988761,0.000191354,0.0002507958,0.0004042887],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989805,0.000144834,0.0001894166,0.0001290665,0.0001446967,0.0004115074],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0003890776,0.0001314011,0.108108,0.0002110086,0.0008488524,0.000003506096,0.3950607,0.00006483191,0.000006312686,0.366147,0.008690462,0.1203388],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.001494309,0.0001993797,0.908248,0.00002453309,0.0001306164,0.000001078843,0.01356346,0.0005664362,0.000001620359,0.00251913,0.07312784,0.0001235868],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9525043,0.005190355,7.830529e-7,0.03827076,0.00007042842,0.0002804951,0.0002125642,0.00001419789,0.003456155],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9732364,0.009719006,0.00002004885,0.01636835,0.0001754435,0.00003789483,0.00001062134,0.000005634183,0.0004265495],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.80014,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9994729,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W1967469576","doi":"10.1017/s0140525x12002269","title":"Personal narratives as the highest level of cognitive integration","year":2013,"lang":"en","type":"letter","venue":"Behavioral and Brain Sciences","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":71,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"York University; University of Toronto","funders":"","keywords":"Narrative; Hierarchy; Generative grammar; Psychology; Function (biology); Cognitive science; Cognition; Humanism; Cognitive psychology; Epistemology; Computer science; Artificial intelligence; Art; Philosophy; Literature; Political science; Neuroscience","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.3389323929293694,"gpt":0.3781855496765003,"spread":0.03925315674713092,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts","insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00031585,0.0001721911,0.0002188899,0.00009380014,0.0007311351,0.000287163,0.0002221809,0.0001176735,0.002169203],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00004223111,0.00008706233,0.00005982471,0.00004981412,0.00343762,0.0003452246,0.00003507646,0.0004607252,0.00005130326],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00000862364,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000172723,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.003741067,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.001212789,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9987465,0.0000956786,0.0002300196,0.0002634742,0.0004351158,0.0002292798],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992207,0.0003117578,0.0002011351,0.00006110918,0.0001698068,0.00003549812],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"not_applicable","study_design_gemma":"not_applicable","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000004352091,0.000032789,0.0002535273,0.00003491226,0.000006200436,0.000006836481,0.2005254,6.33297e-9,0.00004793854,0.006264851,0.7831995,0.009623666],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002149183,0.001316376,0.003265918,0.0005979433,0.00005812302,0.00001481695,0.1501278,0.000008205048,0.00008554111,0.006234088,0.8376622,0.0004140183],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.4385611,0.0002380132,0.00000138117,0.5547512,0.0004739578,0.0003324408,0.0002028525,0.00001249502,0.005426504],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.494634,0.00006415989,0.00004543932,0.4620456,0.003851317,0.0001440779,0.0001475217,0.0000153361,0.03905256],"genre_candidate":"commentary","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.09270565,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9992744,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2124904600","doi":"10.1521/soco.2008.26.2.198","title":"Automatic Effects of Anthropomorphized Objects on Behavior","year":2008,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"Social Cognition","topic":"Media Influence and Health","field":"Arts and Humanities","cited_by":69,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Waterloo","funders":"","keywords":"Psychology; Perception; Personality; Social psychology; Social perception; Construct (python library); Developmental psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06084333899279357,"gpt":0.2946398090737232,"spread":0.2337964700809296,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00005746202,0.00007893639,0.0001718823,0.00006420042,0.0005100371,0.00001063804,0.00003954399,0.00004498658,0.001309225],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00005645534,0.00007275536,0.00006350665,0.00003041927,0.0003369469,0.00008821831,0.000005878018,0.00008940455,0.0002033579],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002025267,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0000589836,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001141572,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00009611856,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9993379,0.00005273751,0.0001690612,0.00009120283,0.0002063565,0.0001427032],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9996071,0.00009948693,0.0001048584,0.00004975639,0.0001035787,0.00003517662],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0002795064,0.003246531,0.001079667,0.002802326,0.0001612915,0.0003437921,0.6809254,1.871455e-7,0.01198644,0.2039672,0.02552275,0.06968491],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0463754,0.02009355,0.4636869,0.005518339,0.003570618,0.0001141806,0.1067394,0.0003113142,0.2347507,0.07795952,0.03499554,0.005884531],"study_design_candidate":"qualitative","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9797133,0.00002611913,0.000001501506,0.00008224519,0.0005073598,0.0003585907,0.00001878695,0.00007249626,0.01921966],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9987206,0.0000330689,0.00001307986,0.0003774168,0.0005697892,0.00007848861,0.00003504869,0.00001021157,0.0001622876],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.574186,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9996037,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null}]}