Results 211 to 220 of about 28,826 (240)
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Conducting Survey Research Using MTurk
2018This chapter presents an introduction to crowdsourcing for survey participant recruitment. It also discusses best practices and ethical considerations for conducting survey research using Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk). Readers will learn the benefits, limitations, and trade-offs of using MTurk as compared to other recruitment services, including ...
Silvana Chambers, Kim Nimon
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How Do Older Adults Recruited Using MTurk Differ From Those in a National Probability Sample?
The International Journal of Aging & Human Development, 2020A growing number of studies within the field of gerontology have included samples recruited from Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (MTurk), an online crowdsourcing portal.
A. Ogletree, Benjamin Katz
semanticscholar +1 more source
Evaluating MTurk as a recruitment tool for rural people with disabilities
Disability and Health Journal, 2021Recruitment of people with disabilities often occurs through disability organizations, advocacy groups, service providers, and patient registries. Recruitment that relies exclusively on established relationships can produce samples that may miss important information.
Catherine Ipsen, Noelle Kurth, Jean Hall
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Process Design to Use Amazon MTurk for Cognitively Complex Tasks
IT Professional, 2021Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) is a very popular method for researchers to complete large volumes of repeatable, cognitively simple tasks such as data labeling. However, MTurk is currently challenging to use for more cognitively complex tasks. This article presents a procedure to help researchers interested in using MTurk to complete large volumes of ...
Anupam Bhattacharjee, Manish Agrawal
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Behavioral Research in Accounting, 2019
We identify a pervasive, yet previously undocumented threat to the reliability of MTurk data—and discuss how this issue is symptomatic of opportunities and incentives that facilitate fraudulent behavior within online recruitment platforms. In doing so,
Sean A. Dennis +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
We identify a pervasive, yet previously undocumented threat to the reliability of MTurk data—and discuss how this issue is symptomatic of opportunities and incentives that facilitate fraudulent behavior within online recruitment platforms. In doing so,
Sean A. Dennis +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Fear of COVID-19 changes economic preferences: evidence from a repeated cross-sectional MTurk survey
Journal of the Economic Science Association, 2021The personal experience of events such as financial crises and natural disasters can alter economic preferences. We administered a repeated cross-sectional preference survey during the early stages of the COVID-19 outbreak, collecting three bi-weekly ...
Abdelaziz Alsharawy +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Is Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk) a comparable recruitment source for trauma studies?
Psychological Trauma, 2020OBJECTIVE Trauma researchers have recently begun using Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk) as a data collection platform that is both time- and cost-efficient.
K. Engle +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Inattentive Responding in MTurk and Other Online Samples
Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 2015The focal article by Landers and Behrend (2015) makes the case that samples collected on microtask websites like Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk) are inherently no better or worse than traditional samples of convenience from university students or organizations. We wholeheartedly agree.
Avi Fleischer +2 more
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Instrumentalizing Technology: Digital Solidarity with and among MTurk Workers
2023As the second half of the analysis of Amazon Mechanical Turk workers, this chapter looks at their agency to focus on the new challenges and different possibilities created by the organization of the platform and wider political–economic, social and technological conditions.
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Crowdsourcing Intelligent Research Participants: A Student versus MTurk Comparison
Behavioral Research in Accounting, 2018ABSTRACT The use of online workers as research participants has grown in recent years, prompting interest in how online workers compare to traditional accounting research participants. To date, no study has compared the relative intelligence of online workers to student subjects.
Steve Buchheit +3 more
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