{"meta":{"page":1,"per_page":50,"max_per_page":100,"total":22,"total_is_capped":false,"direct_labels_cover":0,"predictions_cover":22,"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":"19bddf456c43","filters":{"venue":"European Sociological Review"}},"results":[{"id":"W2139068022","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcs079","title":"Decomposing 'Social Origins': The Effects of Parents' Class, Status, and Education on the Educational Attainment of Their Children","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":388,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council; Cape Breton University; Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior; McKnight Foundation","keywords":"Kingdom; Sociology; Educational attainment; Class (philosophy); Social class; Media studies; Political science; Law","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06120796656822475,"gpt":0.3745388578908437,"spread":0.3133308913226189,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001654148,0.00008683242,0.0001609561,0.000009418636,0.0005569701,0.00001053603,0.0001655578,0.00002102465,0.00009806302],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001185149,0.00004094531,0.00008553832,0.00008710593,0.0004727399,0.00004452711,0.00005138928,0.000106802,0.00001882558],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00007677535,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001233269,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00005291461,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000002302056,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9975213,0.001739925,0.0002582059,0.00009924977,0.0002129896,0.0001682864],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9981365,0.001422412,0.0001995121,0.00008071084,0.0001150873,0.00004581937],"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":[0.000004033215,0.0003709336,0.05987338,0.0001633075,0.00006523384,9.074096e-9,0.01035011,1.447375e-7,0.00004836906,0.8943847,0.02414534,0.01059439],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00004904316,0.00005305903,0.8448049,0.0004688234,0.00004966174,3.055117e-7,0.00238932,1.205269e-7,0.00003501215,0.00380802,0.1482427,0.0000990599],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9044835,0.05462712,0.000003149227,0.02862,0.0004419782,0.0004893329,0.000009884981,0.000006544118,0.01131849],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.972311,0.02309889,0.00002953787,0.003441154,0.0009061011,0.00003312927,0.00002440133,0.000004062221,0.0001517623],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8905767,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.428382,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2170964560","doi":"10.1093/esr/jci002","title":"The Welfare State and the Home: Regime Differences in the Domestic Division of Labour","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Work-Family Balance Challenges","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":282,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Division of labour; Welfare state; Ideology; Welfare; Social stratification; Distribution (mathematics); Inequality; Demographic economics; Division (mathematics); Economics; Macro level; Labour economics; Sociology; Political science; Economic system; Social science; Market economy","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04448188780881877,"gpt":0.3301771495171129,"spread":0.2856952617082941,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.008678777,0.0001203134,0.0003304248,0.000008133413,0.0006011755,0.00005570893,0.0008763494,0.00003346768,0.00009583038],"category_scores_gemma":[0.002193146,0.00004108903,0.00009124929,0.0002030597,0.00212121,0.00005202878,0.0001510872,0.0003331857,0.00005944772],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002182097,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001854669,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000232864,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00006683937,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9922441,0.006607499,0.0003446316,0.0001966621,0.0003282979,0.0002788409],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9966334,0.00281316,0.0002000406,0.0002671982,0.00004559215,0.00004062326],"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":[0.00006467301,0.0001813821,0.04841165,0.0005516245,0.0000547935,0.00002886142,0.05438428,0.000002881458,0.000003795546,0.3275156,0.007497988,0.5613025],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002437992,0.00004161672,0.6865821,0.0004869631,0.0000124245,0.000001103766,0.003811499,7.459579e-7,2.960896e-8,0.005462435,0.3032703,0.00008698388],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.3834536,0.4780928,0.000005527316,0.1065073,0.00007966877,0.0007460627,0.000005245141,0.00003165162,0.03107825],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.590161,0.4084959,0.00001101004,0.000837483,0.00006855893,0.00001018248,3.588192e-7,0.000003438642,0.0004120648],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6381705,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7815687,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2268645508","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcv077","title":"Social Mobility and Class Identity: The Role of Economic Conditions in 33 Societies, 1999–2009","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":68,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"","keywords":"Social mobility; Sociology; Class (philosophy); Identity (music); Social class; Social identity theory; Economic geography; Economic system; Demographic economics; Economics; Social science; Epistemology; Social group; Market economy","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1744607928175755,"gpt":0.4268920259565359,"spread":0.2524312331389604,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003431263,0.00006700021,0.0002037043,0.000008453479,0.0003269164,0.00001953473,0.000176913,0.00003306499,0.000118817],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008348027,0.00004471058,0.00008653363,0.00006672183,0.0008259537,0.0001024859,0.00008657161,0.0001229946,0.00008355627],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001038654,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000110511,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000195831,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002013793,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9978923,0.001388709,0.0003052749,0.0001372902,0.0001443557,0.0001320858],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9994284,0.00023443,0.0001392144,0.00006072036,0.00009061217,0.00004662128],"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":[0.000003391991,0.00008985956,0.01019723,0.00006119521,0.0000244169,5.588662e-7,0.009271574,0.000002353907,0.000008394301,0.8672787,0.1119952,0.001067104],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00009702962,0.00002832953,0.08648647,0.00008734998,0.00002408646,5.021393e-7,0.01198122,0.000003989391,0.000001143378,0.1987697,0.7024024,0.0001177464],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.5881999,0.1465138,0.000008040864,0.06844896,0.000408179,0.000740888,0.0001336356,0.00004742335,0.1954991],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9817272,0.01469936,0.00002057483,0.002685685,0.0004133045,0.00002202264,0.00001882314,0.000003275175,0.0004097903],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.668509,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3043261,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2979598276","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcz049","title":"Navigating Institutions: Parents’ Knowledge of the Educational System and Students’ Success in Education","year":2019,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":65,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Office of International Science and Engineering; University of Toronto; Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek; Universiteit van Amsterdam","keywords":"Educational attainment; Affect (linguistics); Educational inequality; Cultural capital; Psychology; Human capital; Social capital; Status attainment; Longitudinal study; Higher education; Inequality; Sociology; Demographic economics; Social psychology; Mathematics education; Socioeconomic status; Economic growth; Social science; Economics; Demography; Medicine","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1139941105882752,"gpt":0.4590840288627503,"spread":0.3450899182744751,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001686398,0.00006860256,0.0001629454,0.000008498561,0.0002598753,0.00001815985,0.0002830353,0.00002389681,0.00008417819],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008392744,0.00004385967,0.00005716983,0.000188236,0.0002409902,0.00007563673,0.0001137989,0.0001482912,0.00009990889],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0001320141,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003265634,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001666432,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0000515727,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9980342,0.001188387,0.0003417342,0.000152758,0.0001775668,0.0001053244],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9993037,0.0002481957,0.0001426236,0.00009315901,0.0001784313,0.0000338763],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000001299099,0.0002382674,0.5283923,0.0007378895,0.00001241375,5.286089e-8,0.006395794,0.000002135503,0.000009572657,0.4590265,0.001197823,0.003986039],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00009504292,0.000017169,0.9145107,0.006754577,0.00001849574,0.000001203065,0.01090894,0.000001502276,0.000001605061,0.0008893507,0.06667304,0.0001283952],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9005255,0.0492805,0.000001383602,0.006506409,0.0008067248,0.0004593084,0.000004352713,0.000009757755,0.04240609],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9900467,0.008284191,0.00004151345,0.0007303058,0.0002467329,0.00003722355,0.00001212253,0.000002842739,0.0005983506],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4581371,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.1998777,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2966917524","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcz010","title":"Signals, Educational Decision-Making, and Inequality","year":2019,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":64,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"H2020 European Research Council; Strategic Research Council; Rockwool Fonden","keywords":"Inequality; Sociology; Mathematical economics; Mathematics; Positive economics; Econometrics; Demographic economics; Economics; Mathematical analysis","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.09108857650730333,"gpt":0.428039750324109,"spread":0.3369511738168056,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.002772998,0.00009467158,0.000209055,0.00001427318,0.0003503021,0.00003200376,0.0001775417,0.00003217245,0.005470733],"category_scores_gemma":[0.003369958,0.00006831144,0.00008480476,0.00009904142,0.0002177017,0.00008341956,0.00009029015,0.0001206237,0.001705634],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004909926,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00009829167,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001712192,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000007673869,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9978999,0.001103849,0.0003118635,0.000244344,0.0002668852,0.0001730925],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9982063,0.001336477,0.0001012304,0.0001040588,0.0001757448,0.00007615111],"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":[0.000009678186,0.0001432253,0.02625185,0.0002707466,0.00003794894,0.000001408616,0.00283313,0.000002209858,0.0000199569,0.8014023,0.1397794,0.02924819],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00006575113,0.00004196127,0.1379783,0.0009700542,0.00001616582,0.000001404482,0.0006063208,0.000001827607,2.479208e-7,0.05270647,0.8074043,0.0002071129],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.3723658,0.1270942,0.0002102618,0.07467006,0.001109521,0.0007760625,0.00002414548,0.0000881142,0.4236618],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9489518,0.03249392,0.0009264851,0.01394826,0.0007418257,0.00001414559,0.00001785044,0.000006233473,0.002899458],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7486958,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9990717,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4210844108","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcac014","title":"Genetic Influences on Educational Achievement in Cross-National Perspective","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":46,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Max-Planck-Institut für demografische Forschung; Université de Lausanne; Vetenskapsrådet; H2020 European Research Council; Stockholms Universitet; European University Institute; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; American Association for the Advancement of Science; European Commission; Leibniz-Gemeinschaft; Forskningsrådet om Hälsa, Arbetsliv och Välfärd; Princeton University; Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study; American Academy of Arts and Sciences; York University; Universitetet i Oslo; New York Genome Center; Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung","keywords":"Disadvantaged; Welfare state; Affect (linguistics); Welfare; Social stratification; Perspective (graphical); Population; Demographic economics; Variance (accounting); Sociology; Political science; Demography; Economic growth; Economics; Social science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1655020902682162,"gpt":0.4685385479540369,"spread":0.3030364576858207,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002506948,0.00009053086,0.0001406695,0.00003781173,0.0009503324,0.00002580946,0.000286263,0.00001389574,0.003323613],"category_scores_gemma":[0.00192368,0.00007567779,0.00009136244,0.0002118377,0.0002289717,0.00005107804,0.0001113698,0.0002271058,0.0003359714],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0008740015,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0003043101,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001408578,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00002984655,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9967504,0.001848853,0.0003145643,0.0002644894,0.0006338323,0.0001878839],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991235,0.0004195058,0.0000988788,0.00006082205,0.0002459748,0.00005131243],"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":[0.000009174612,0.000448319,0.03111015,0.00002384282,0.0000190353,0.000002817507,0.004569512,0.0003986963,0.0000040263,0.9317258,0.03127673,0.0004118768],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00007969679,0.00008475215,0.6426157,0.00006645467,0.000004388225,8.231468e-7,0.00181452,0.000001607624,1.608416e-7,0.05013176,0.3050611,0.0001389968],"study_design_candidate":"theoretical_or_conceptual","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.2832838,0.03536466,0.000006062939,0.2882743,0.0007910862,0.000678357,0.00006841244,0.00004655018,0.3914868],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9616439,0.00654979,0.0001619637,0.02577406,0.0008390187,0.0002193219,0.00003442453,0.000006208861,0.004771256],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.8815941,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9975875,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4226008180","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcac019","title":"Women’s Relative Resources and Couples’ Gender Balance in Financial Decision-Making","year":2022,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":33,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Eesti Teadusagentuur","keywords":"Earnings; Realm; Demographic economics; Quarter (Canadian coin); Economics; Finance; Political science; Geography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.04891576853193198,"gpt":0.3178282318580403,"spread":0.2689124633261084,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004826624,0.000135351,0.0003445504,0.0000324843,0.0007791244,0.00002707238,0.0003702997,0.00004916119,0.0005716718],"category_scores_gemma":[0.002739099,0.0001132806,0.00007416528,0.0003635402,0.0003528278,0.00007375459,0.0003405682,0.0005172027,0.00004023735],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000277963,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00007923642,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000008850894,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00000840126,"domain_scores_codex":[0.996035,0.002452668,0.0003561416,0.0003840118,0.0003551274,0.0004170841],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.998835,0.0007350227,0.000143909,0.0001477067,0.00003741473,0.0001008958],"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":[0.0001082918,0.0004032399,0.3254144,0.0005200868,0.00005136933,0.0007380728,0.2680346,0.0001433896,0.00001417517,0.1758702,0.01678346,0.2119187],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0001965059,0.00009667924,0.4124826,0.0003263414,0.0000114054,0.000003413009,0.01272298,0.00003106859,3.957768e-9,0.02172095,0.5521331,0.0002749647],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.831299,0.1185743,0.0002436705,0.0005344761,0.0002081697,0.0004087345,0.00002079142,0.00006951718,0.0486414],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9029635,0.09094451,0.0004382506,0.00526789,0.0001231286,0.00004030649,0.000003269213,0.00001199265,0.0002072147],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.5353497,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6259405,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2311121570","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcv063","title":"Changes in the Educational Achievement of Immigrant Youth in Western Societies: The Contextual Effects of National (Educational) Policies","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":31,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"","keywords":"Immigration; Sociology; Media studies; Social science; Library science; Political science; Law","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1268669471426532,"gpt":0.3877500997593121,"spread":0.2608831526166588,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.005031648,0.0000804195,0.0001968084,0.00002389838,0.00009045391,0.00001111091,0.0004857826,0.00003063626,0.00004462479],"category_scores_gemma":[0.002201165,0.00004136497,0.00007150916,0.000249372,0.0004891353,0.00005518921,0.00004619705,0.0001764502,0.00003147091],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006750844,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002616901,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0002466991,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0006145474,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9971429,0.001799035,0.0003016639,0.0001137963,0.0004885228,0.0001541175],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9981492,0.001381866,0.0001851354,0.0001057833,0.000143897,0.00003414659],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"qualitative","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003423419,0.0008944946,0.3509152,0.001241669,0.00004483741,0.000001127071,0.5326275,0.0000117196,0.0000364958,0.07288059,0.03702931,0.004282831],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0003768718,0.0001809146,0.9042425,0.001404688,0.00002423667,5.115745e-7,0.04033193,5.364973e-7,0.000005732475,0.003644902,0.0496521,0.0001350588],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.8104739,0.05589406,0.000001260766,0.1183522,0.000155199,0.0006969415,0.00001675523,0.000006054939,0.01440365],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9667399,0.02517756,0.00001083525,0.007387076,0.0003769125,0.00004054195,0.00001703216,0.000003402449,0.0002467501],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.5533273,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.2635159,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2616632524","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcy045","title":"Contingent Employment and Labour Market Pathways: Bridge or Trap?","year":2018,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Employment and Welfare Studies","field":"Health Professions","cited_by":30,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Queen's University; Department of Social Services, Australian Government; Australian Research Council; Queen's University Belfast; Australian Government","keywords":"Casual; Trap (plumbing); Bridge (graph theory); Economics; Labour economics; Demographic economics; Political science; Biology; Geography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2243295997957108,"gpt":0.4358963519201789,"spread":0.2115667521244681,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.002831014,0.0002317975,0.0005646905,0.0000159953,0.0008416098,0.00000844943,0.0001990916,0.00006995585,0.005365461],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001167323,0.000128532,0.0001044823,0.0001010318,0.0003431107,0.00004044459,0.0004039677,0.0003851674,0.001395102],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004143785,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00003368366,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000008924326,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000008700222,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9954922,0.002780327,0.0006505347,0.00039658,0.0001618643,0.000518547],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9986787,0.0005376405,0.0002303562,0.0002474643,0.0001435707,0.0001622727],"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":[0.0001018775,0.0001145783,0.06428725,0.002424764,0.0001202679,0.00008363323,0.002900938,1.327264e-9,0.00004827217,0.006771288,0.8250383,0.09810883],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002870417,0.0002838401,0.3568227,0.001688032,0.0000335549,0.000001490319,0.0001266556,1.409294e-7,4.265102e-7,0.0001759966,0.6404492,0.0001309419],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.4187608,0.1961856,0.00008796877,0.02929215,0.0009874711,0.003377029,0.0001006182,0.0006505077,0.3505579],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.495524,0.4124261,0.0002259985,0.06302936,0.001996133,0.0001569147,0.00002049654,0.00006411879,0.02655692],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.324001,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9993824,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2161767329","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcm021","title":"Economic Inequality In and Outside of Marriage: Individual Resources and Institutional Context","year":2007,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":29,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of British Columbia","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada","keywords":"Inequality; Context (archaeology); Economic inequality; Economics; Social inequality; Demographic economics; Income inequality metrics; Ideology; Sociology; Political science; Politics; Geography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.08318094108687775,"gpt":0.3420243198130732,"spread":0.2588433787261955,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.006669436,0.00009224554,0.0002972529,0.00002647124,0.0001413238,0.00001654624,0.0001596097,0.00006547818,0.00005214662],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008137472,0.00007308362,0.00004367289,0.00006951281,0.0009610523,0.00006250534,0.0001144164,0.0001730635,0.00001405929],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004275909,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00004794173,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001510204,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002674075,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9980788,0.0009681277,0.0004189539,0.0002116215,0.000121298,0.0002012642],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992848,0.0003718567,0.0001328939,0.00008262559,0.00002496168,0.0001028798],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.0000168743,0.0000647279,0.7723366,0.0003965018,0.00002559836,0.00003516939,0.01716663,0.000001555532,0.00001571067,0.1176399,0.0004390441,0.09186167],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002090936,0.00003522952,0.9479671,0.0002104819,0.00001043457,0.000001313397,0.003954718,0.000001036606,1.840025e-7,0.001261948,0.04624874,0.00009969951],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.9248432,0.04359327,0.00005063597,0.0003731005,0.00005401397,0.0001942684,0.00002196126,0.00001618169,0.03085337],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9421158,0.0561659,0.0001633124,0.001414248,0.00008931282,0.000001298368,0.000007146495,0.00000376602,0.00003923967],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.1756305,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3541037,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2127793459","doi":"10.1093/esr/jci053","title":"Class Politics and Political Context in Britain, 1964-1997: Have Voters Become More Individualized?","year":2005,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Social and Cultural Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":28,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"Economic and Social Research Council; Government of the United Kingdom","keywords":"Salience (neuroscience); Social class; Multinomial logistic regression; Politics; Class (philosophy); Social identity theory; Context (archaeology); Survey data collection; Logit; Demographic economics; Social stratification; Sociology; Social psychology; Political science; Political economy; Economics; Psychology; Social group; Econometrics; Social science; Geography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05888764717039382,"gpt":0.3610447566743599,"spread":0.3021571095039661,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001544251,0.0002010785,0.0004961311,0.00002237135,0.0003598411,0.00006505975,0.0003389935,0.000145847,0.0001985881],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001627904,0.000151731,0.0001740399,0.0001413146,0.001299321,0.00009394944,0.0001507419,0.0004446396,0.0001712055],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002356637,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00005722239,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000267776,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002328073,"domain_scores_codex":[0.996386,0.001732777,0.000474356,0.0003431001,0.0003047777,0.0007590029],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989722,0.0003431328,0.0001042492,0.0001284673,0.00007144416,0.0003805346],"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":[0.000004242392,0.0001055836,0.01139346,0.0001644075,0.00002595561,0.00005987784,0.008688176,2.487843e-7,0.000003213474,0.8831721,0.006571164,0.0898116],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004025786,0.00006193868,0.04660148,0.0005200819,0.00004552233,0.000006252266,0.01041496,0.0000112255,2.232054e-7,0.005770298,0.9357998,0.0003656698],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.4777482,0.09777469,0.00001497137,0.1718839,0.0002257908,0.001311655,0.0001317426,0.000244431,0.2506646],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9349582,0.02557546,0.0001864055,0.03753029,0.0005285577,0.00001079223,0.00002883445,0.0000161691,0.001165324],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.9292286,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.6187409,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2258271059","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcv098","title":"Private Schooling, Educational Transitions, and Early Labour Market Outcomes: Evidence from Three Anglophone Countries","year":2015,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":24,"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":"Economic and Social Research Council","keywords":"Demographic economics; Private school; State (computer science); Private education; Work (physics); Academic achievement; Empirical evidence; Political science; Sociology; Economic growth; Higher education; Economics; Psychology; Developmental psychology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1649500741134545,"gpt":0.3933216940300075,"spread":0.228371619916553,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002713525,0.0001352135,0.0002830377,0.00001652312,0.0004787345,0.0000774556,0.0002253086,0.00004257222,0.001221049],"category_scores_gemma":[0.004929097,0.00009794162,0.00008540499,0.0001288451,0.0004281505,0.0002332164,0.00006261498,0.0001548007,0.0004840706],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00008645387,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0002137847,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0003860343,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001049367,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9976444,0.00114524,0.0003633734,0.0002690435,0.0003741135,0.0002038024],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.998495,0.00073108,0.0001177225,0.0001179391,0.0003499889,0.0001882399],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00003625648,0.0001669168,0.5051485,0.0002622718,0.0001582819,0.00001406938,0.01413775,0.000001285705,0.00001299109,0.2473644,0.2309189,0.001778417],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00007842432,0.00003064197,0.736349,0.0006480465,0.0000293551,7.123319e-7,0.0004840965,4.537792e-7,2.904364e-7,0.02115435,0.2410747,0.0001499759],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.5840933,0.2407499,0.0001814095,0.1641658,0.0005521174,0.0003819308,0.00007865462,0.0000677497,0.009729161],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.7899259,0.1809324,0.003576894,0.01830187,0.002206301,0.00007882823,0.00005692864,0.00001834191,0.004902463],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.2312005,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.999692,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2122057814","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcs065","title":"Are There Catholic School Effects in Ontario, Canada?","year":2012,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Pasture and Agricultural Systems","field":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","cited_by":23,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"McMaster University","funders":"","keywords":"Sociology; Demographic economics; Political science; Economics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.03954710350142614,"gpt":0.2307708981039273,"spread":0.1912237946025012,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.0007009702,0.0002070901,0.0004254378,0.000002431549,0.0001072044,0.00001743373,0.0003033271,0.00006126573,0.0009321895],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003239829,0.00005602172,0.0001274136,0.0001701939,0.00003121496,0.000083563,0.00009291311,0.0003904562,0.0004419493],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002104068,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001700844,"about_ca_topic_candidate":true,"about_ca_topic_consensus":true,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.3512369,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.821402,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9978142,0.0009624673,0.0003093882,0.0002425598,0.0001855546,0.0004857968],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9992327,0.0002159076,0.000191269,0.00006350283,0.00002617976,0.0002704432],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000004675246,0.0001458679,0.9079949,0.0002497141,0.0000177391,0.0001920716,0.00008867304,2.325434e-7,0.004286093,0.0001466263,0.06397623,0.02289712],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00003324056,0.0000211144,0.6323934,0.0005428899,0.000006862513,0.000007847569,0.0000315552,1.64669e-8,0.000003778359,0.00000563716,0.3668334,0.0001202357],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.8983582,0.08400226,8.241681e-8,0.001457628,0.0001640209,0.0004294895,0.000004919028,0.0000426609,0.01554075],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9896187,0.002182461,0.000006791394,0.006629481,0.000524034,0.00002646017,0.0000302445,0.000001113615,0.0009807806],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4701651,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999811,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3114507323","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcaa064","title":"Parenthood and the Gender Gap in Workplace Authority","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Work-Family Balance Challenges","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":23,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"York University; Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek; Universiteit van Amsterdam; Radboud Universiteit; National Academy of Sciences; New York University Abu Dhabi","keywords":"Representation (politics); Gender gap; Psychology; Local authority; Affect (linguistics); Population; Social psychology; Demographic economics; Demography; Sociology; Political science; Law; Economics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1812978844594305,"gpt":0.3626099588531095,"spread":0.181312074393679,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004612699,0.0001196543,0.0003595323,0.000005207659,0.0002081641,0.00003254041,0.0003930342,0.00005575288,0.000319322],"category_scores_gemma":[0.003292725,0.00006853093,0.00009432188,0.0002102385,0.0008327697,0.00004983918,0.000178425,0.0004412999,0.0002615509],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003139865,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002872367,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.000007745044,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000009310663,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9934272,0.005509027,0.0002657959,0.0003071763,0.000204005,0.0002868602],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9989386,0.000663728,0.00009218205,0.0001328475,0.00002432533,0.0001483097],"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":[0.0001743953,0.0002331235,0.2121714,0.001984427,0.0001018906,0.0001960327,0.1320777,0.000004066749,0.000008395399,0.3559557,0.1678005,0.1292924],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0007684255,0.00004415012,0.2081267,0.0007144921,0.00004061999,0.000001208461,0.006417344,0.000002533848,7.488091e-8,0.006601937,0.7769936,0.0002889545],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.01033477,0.5190025,0.00004891128,0.06236922,0.00008943574,0.0007600785,0.000001816644,0.0001610024,0.4072323],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.5642442,0.4267294,0.00009653025,0.008452554,0.0003139586,0.00001221315,0.000001347297,0.000007646255,0.0001421959],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.609193,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.3941938,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W2953008554","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcz032","title":"Bonus or Burden? Care Work, Inequality, and Job Satisfaction in Eighteen European Countries","year":2019,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Work-Family Balance Challenges","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":14,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"University of Calgary","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; European Commission","keywords":"Professionalization; Job satisfaction; Alienation; Inequality; Work (physics); Care work; Economic inequality; Psychology; Job attitude; European Social Survey; Social psychology; Demographic economics; Labour economics; Sociology; Economics; Job performance; Political science; Social science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.06584168444551342,"gpt":0.3427504177768704,"spread":0.276908733331357,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"category_scores_codex":[0.003707934,0.0002188326,0.0005247683,0.0000324582,0.0001897729,0.00007526665,0.0003395386,0.00008848438,0.0009953484],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0008951352,0.0001519774,0.00008983233,0.0002668407,0.0004323555,0.0001561677,0.0002231282,0.0004217584,0.001658067],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.000155727,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00005615102,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001168375,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0002293596,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9931955,0.005087887,0.0004706062,0.0004848016,0.0003362996,0.0004249144],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987847,0.0005303406,0.0001816142,0.0002795642,0.00008813663,0.0001356204],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.00002627363,0.00001211856,0.914415,0.0007954208,0.00001476673,0.0000773326,0.01266371,8.471666e-7,0.000004841977,0.001912716,0.003624783,0.06645217],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0002076059,0.00006551647,0.7421747,0.001645135,0.00001471464,0.000001502152,0.003541316,3.934955e-8,9.80101e-8,0.0000856063,0.2520492,0.0002145295],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.6088173,0.1863425,0.000003582153,0.001960498,0.000216144,0.0007605058,0.000007275707,0.000182075,0.2017102],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.6860696,0.3114021,0.00007503681,0.001115708,0.0003164122,0.000006387813,0.000006618487,0.00002116944,0.0009869755],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.2484244,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999179,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W3128297183","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcaa074","title":"Partners’ Relative Income and the Risk of Union Dissolution in Two Institutional Contexts","year":2021,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Gender, Labor, and Family Dynamics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":5,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":true},"ca_institutions":"McGill University","funders":"Grantová Agentura České Republiky","keywords":"Cohabitation; Demographic economics; Context (archaeology); Economics; Period (music); Demography; Geography; Sociology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.05523111676532622,"gpt":0.3598182388697042,"spread":0.3045871221043779,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.004606668,0.00007596584,0.0002622247,0.000009698526,0.0002760005,0.0000104609,0.0001243902,0.00003361241,0.00004110386],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0032636,0.00004508808,0.00009135413,0.0002216376,0.00140304,0.00007292569,0.00009263188,0.0002514128,0.00001835799],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00004863659,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008267372,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00009175952,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001321779,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9923754,0.006865566,0.0002889884,0.0001708888,0.0001562773,0.0001429185],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9990048,0.0005952329,0.0001505723,0.0001052211,0.00009509625,0.00004912279],"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":[0.000007896532,0.00003855232,0.1091555,0.00006332347,0.00002008225,0.00001448686,0.005231034,0.00001065207,0.000004349319,0.8793758,0.00006388547,0.006014458],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0008109623,0.00002129331,0.9462997,0.0005970068,0.00005198457,0.000001742718,0.001772204,0.00002845508,1.578394e-7,0.02692713,0.02338455,0.000104863],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.6359857,0.2084634,0.001309508,0.003619628,0.0002107733,0.0005815951,0.00002743796,0.00003686212,0.1497651],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.7764452,0.2228453,0.0001041143,0.0003918686,0.00004328373,0.000003512976,0.000009932218,0.000002393158,0.0001545007],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8524487,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5169559,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4379058660","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcad031","title":"Racial bias in media coverage: accounting for structural position and public interest","year":2023,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Media Studies and Communication","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":4,"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":"Newspaper; Media coverage; Position (finance); Public interest; Media bias; White (mutation); Race (biology); Scale (ratio); Demographic economics; Political science; Econometrics; Sociology; Economics; Geography; Media studies; Gender studies; Law; Cartography","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.2960137653903288,"gpt":0.4144712468730056,"spread":0.1184574814826768,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.002781786,0.00006886006,0.0001869374,0.00002311295,0.0003637161,0.00004885838,0.0002146259,0.00003555834,0.00005619843],"category_scores_gemma":[0.006638947,0.0000508942,0.00005542918,0.0002172975,0.0002066992,0.00009829905,0.0001669687,0.0001428242,0.00005550185],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00003757154,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00001902392,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001097826,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.0001303457,"domain_scores_codex":[0.998218,0.001079606,0.0002304235,0.0001498678,0.0001009684,0.0002211576],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9987832,0.0009217079,0.00009683817,0.00009135548,0.00005349062,0.00005340642],"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":[0.00001365927,0.0000254015,0.01698483,0.0004909669,0.00002056838,0.00001346774,0.01099428,1.642081e-7,0.00004736086,0.132098,0.0127083,0.826603],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004816268,0.00009611423,0.1965798,0.001005876,0.00002877367,0.000001142144,0.003853582,0.00003848718,4.865555e-7,0.01306721,0.7845483,0.0002985592],"study_design_candidate":"design_other","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.883804,0.05502808,0.00003175313,0.04431656,0.0003865911,0.000981445,0.00001583082,0.0001833492,0.01525241],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.8279147,0.1704294,0.00005260421,0.001260687,0.0002406045,0.00002255536,0.00005072045,0.000005023474,0.00002365621],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.8263044,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7947919,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4394980115","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcae018","title":"Who gets the goods? Disentangling the effects of parliamentary representation and collective action on social spending","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Social Policy and Reform Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":2,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Western University","keywords":"Collective action; Action (physics); Representation (politics); Economics; Sociology; Positive economics; Microeconomics; Neoclassical economics; Political science; Law; Politics","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1511353723057791,"gpt":0.4357547250239114,"spread":0.2846193527181322,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["sts"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.001355189,0.00009264324,0.0002031491,0.00001199571,0.001351775,0.00004403471,0.0001342424,0.00003474887,0.00001217385],"category_scores_gemma":[0.001111316,0.00004146036,0.0001489615,0.0001939963,0.0007624149,0.00006199176,0.00007904591,0.0002307177,0.00001732401],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00008393332,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002050331,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00004884012,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00001531022,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9972065,0.002066936,0.0001804373,0.0001777881,0.0002033004,0.0001650502],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9980558,0.001744216,0.0000934604,0.0000629956,0.00001716098,0.0000263434],"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":[0.00005185939,0.0001048352,0.003519142,0.002648788,0.0006244296,0.00008091262,0.1698536,6.968207e-7,0.0001664171,0.09572858,0.05501226,0.6722085],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00101676,0.00101036,0.5200802,0.01525436,0.001805898,0.000009815175,0.1431183,0.00003297161,0.000369541,0.1299584,0.1861599,0.001183442],"study_design_candidate":"design_other","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.4654794,0.2741739,0.00002262453,0.06052179,0.002199164,0.003169588,0.00001613103,0.0002499628,0.1941673],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.7549641,0.242164,0.000002927635,0.001245686,0.00110774,0.00002055304,0.00000176785,0.000007676739,0.0004856369],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.671025,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999483,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4416595993","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcaf052","title":"Increasingly polarized? Inequality, prosperity, and perceived socioeconomic conflict in advanced economies (1987–2019)","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Cultural Differences and Values","field":"Psychology","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung; Queen's University; European Commission; Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main; McGill University; Princeton University","keywords":"Socioeconomic status; Economic inequality; Inequality; Prosperity; Polarization (electrochemistry); Salience (neuroscience); Income distribution; Social inequality","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.09560325630364556,"gpt":0.3991304969517721,"spread":0.3035272406481265,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":["insufficient_payload"],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.00165533,0.0002600634,0.0007633105,0.00003781123,0.0001139689,0.00005218446,0.0003093416,0.0001127701,0.002142366],"category_scores_gemma":[0.0003350003,0.0001845029,0.0001615528,0.00006777402,0.0003514268,0.00008749436,0.0002715498,0.0003987509,0.0005583987],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00008699724,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00002570321,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0001072888,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00001497735,"domain_scores_codex":[0.996546,0.001845637,0.0006381688,0.0005794504,0.00005552265,0.0003352202],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991436,0.0002812067,0.0001620861,0.0002852489,0.0000436864,0.00008414172],"domain_codex":null,"domain_gemma":null,"domain_candidate":null,"domain_consensus":null,"study_design_codex":"observational","study_design_gemma":"observational","study_design_scores_codex":[0.000204405,0.0004638289,0.6778119,0.001652394,0.0002827496,0.00005590095,0.004286826,7.11234e-7,0.001206502,0.07663043,0.01691789,0.2204865],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0008303369,0.00009843698,0.9517431,0.0007102797,0.00004667469,0.000006571727,0.0003683389,0.000006724747,5.095834e-7,0.001693405,0.04426098,0.0002346453],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":"observational","genre_codex":"empirical","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.854794,0.09450337,0.000002722945,0.002649175,0.0001757491,0.0007027191,0.00001921016,0.00006395565,0.04708907],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.9362093,0.05534058,0.0001075135,0.005990449,0.00006743828,0.00005053276,0.00004366677,0.00001329155,0.002177275],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":"empirical","teacher_disagreement_score":0.2739312,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9987698,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4391727537","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcae005","title":"Response to: ‘Signals, Educational Decision-Making, and Inequality’: a comment on the formal model by Holm, Hjorth-Trolle, and Jæger","year":2024,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Western University","funders":"","keywords":"Inequality; Mathematical economics; Sociology; Econometrics; Mathematics; Calculus (dental); Psychology; Mathematical analysis; Medicine","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1146913374731788,"gpt":0.4265123164949965,"spread":0.3118209790218177,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.006501391,0.0001326714,0.0001946452,0.00002394188,0.0007698906,0.0001163463,0.00017704,0.0000327876,0.0003560367],"category_scores_gemma":[0.004182775,0.0000746531,0.00007959831,0.0001310411,0.0002596521,0.00008729415,0.0001487474,0.0001822256,0.0001769793],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00006757195,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.000112173,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00001142246,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.000004162833,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9971086,0.00172404,0.0003376991,0.0002850005,0.0003273842,0.0002172105],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9956057,0.004030352,0.00005077391,0.0001051367,0.0001006476,0.000107363],"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":[0.0000522999,0.00005712972,0.0000775426,0.00005272097,0.00002664365,0.000001265291,0.003702924,0.000008511496,0.00001724777,0.2868365,0.7028539,0.006313303],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.00004684455,0.0001008864,0.002615003,0.001092949,0.00002092427,0.000001483149,0.0006504948,0.0001009117,4.833598e-7,0.02022728,0.9749789,0.000163881],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":"not_applicable","genre_codex":"commentary","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.134094,0.07277403,0.0009922766,0.7774043,0.0002611428,0.0006171187,0.00008805445,0.00004829873,0.01372073],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.8505196,0.02336143,0.0005088986,0.1231963,0.0003167582,0.0000886279,0.00001482753,0.000009901367,0.001983701],"genre_candidate":"empirical","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.7164255,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.5921454,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4411129094","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcaf027","title":"Ethnic preferences, opportunity structures, and the school segregation process","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"School Choice and Performance","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":1,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Engineering Link (Canada)","funders":"Vetenskapsrådet","keywords":"Ethnic group; Process (computing); Sociology; Demographic economics; Computer science; Economics; Anthropology","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1295919102292675,"gpt":0.4092815716995973,"spread":0.2796896614703298,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline"},"prediction":{"model_version":"codex-gemma-dda1882f352a","candidate_categories":[],"consensus_categories":[],"category_scores_codex":[0.003977703,0.0001025051,0.0002271005,0.00001321616,0.0005857228,0.00005375282,0.0003995042,0.00006053567,0.0006829175],"category_scores_gemma":[0.004969681,0.00005308566,0.0000638667,0.0002704432,0.0007565519,0.0001265133,0.00007614038,0.000427662,0.00007718387],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.00002561686,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.0001927012,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.00003868902,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00003440583,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9967883,0.002379273,0.0002463045,0.0002062248,0.0001891762,0.0001907142],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9991258,0.0003709045,0.0001164392,0.0001676293,0.00009430757,0.0001249061],"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":[0.00006385927,0.000037439,0.01162576,0.001649976,0.00006560708,0.000006456951,0.003694219,0.00000148025,0.000003871004,0.2608484,0.05938506,0.6626179],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0006679793,0.00003956337,0.1727587,0.001687075,0.0001241952,0.000001519989,0.001334995,0.000005605052,0.000001635805,0.1047282,0.7183989,0.0002516808],"study_design_candidate":"not_applicable","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"other","genre_gemma":"empirical","genre_scores_codex":[0.07447905,0.3382448,0.00004419317,0.02656211,0.0002363419,0.001166687,0.00000477284,0.0001628736,0.5590991],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.5488622,0.4317394,0.00004481949,0.0168118,0.0002476308,0.00002886481,0.000009562151,0.000004451049,0.00225129],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":null,"teacher_disagreement_score":0.6623662,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.7477468,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null},{"id":"W4410301623","doi":"10.1093/esr/jcaf016","title":"To what extent do disadvantaged neighbourhoods mediate social assistance dependency? Evidence from Sweden","year":2025,"lang":"en","type":"article","venue":"European Sociological Review","topic":"Employment and Welfare Studies","field":"Health Professions","cited_by":0,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"routes":{"ca_aff":true,"ca_fund":false,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false},"ca_institutions":"Engineering Link (Canada)","funders":"Stockholms Universitet; Riksbankens Jubileumsfond; Vetenskapsrådet","keywords":"Disadvantaged; Dependency (UML); Sociology; Demographic economics; Economic geography; Economic growth; Geography; Economics; Computer science","retraction":null,"screen_n_in":null,"score":{"opus":0.1461677597736204,"gpt":0.4815588164537002,"spread":0.3353910566800798,"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":[0.002797564,0.0003366606,0.0008813502,0.0000328409,0.001368539,0.00004600666,0.0006896749,0.000125501,0.001801681],"category_scores_gemma":[0.003508334,0.0002245226,0.0002863644,0.0002998841,0.0001654035,0.0002630023,0.0009182765,0.0008906677,0.002645207],"about_ca_system_candidate":false,"about_ca_system_consensus":false,"about_ca_system_score_codex":0.0002064479,"about_ca_system_score_gemma":0.00008272326,"about_ca_topic_candidate":false,"about_ca_topic_consensus":false,"about_ca_topic_score_codex":0.0000167726,"about_ca_topic_score_gemma":0.00001992453,"domain_scores_codex":[0.9924085,0.00487269,0.0009790306,0.000713897,0.0003583575,0.0006676003],"domain_scores_gemma":[0.9967704,0.002169556,0.0002985249,0.0004189457,0.000163133,0.000179454],"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":[0.0002048868,0.0002302472,0.219648,0.003906232,0.000385114,0.0001705643,0.009308744,5.837924e-7,0.0004754179,0.01140935,0.3517309,0.40253],"study_design_scores_gemma":[0.0004023641,0.0000924842,0.6899581,0.02645233,0.0002028224,1.557959e-7,0.002020551,3.410589e-7,0.000002304553,0.003870129,0.2765938,0.0004045892],"study_design_candidate":"observational","study_design_consensus":null,"genre_codex":"review","genre_gemma":"review","genre_scores_codex":[0.07041472,0.7490928,0.001443309,0.1150645,0.002521513,0.002872382,0.00005583142,0.0004619366,0.05807292],"genre_scores_gemma":[0.4242803,0.5299851,0.0002564672,0.0401126,0.000962395,0.000261164,0.0000329933,0.00003438799,0.00407453],"genre_candidate":"review","genre_consensus":"review","teacher_disagreement_score":0.4703102,"threshold_uncertainty_score":0.9999315,"prediction_status":"machine_predicted_unvalidated"},"labels":[],"label_agreement":null}]}