New technologies like large-scale social media sides (e.g., Facebook and Twitter) and crowdsourcing services (e.g., Amazon Mechanical Turk, Crowdflower, Clickworker) impact social science research and provide many new and interesting avenues for research. The use of these new technologies for research has not been without challenges and a recently published psychological study on Facebook led to a widespread discussion on the ethics of conducting large-scale experiments online. Surprisingly little has been said about the ethics of conducting research using commercial crowdsourcing market places. In this paper, I want to focus on the question of which ethical questions are raised by data collection with crowdsourcing tools. I briefly draw on...
At the most recent convention of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, there were three...
In the social and cognitive sciences, crowdsourcing provides up to half of all research participants...
This study is a replication of one of two studies found in “Beyond the Turk: Alternative platforms f...
New technologies like large-scale social media sides (e.g., Facebook and Twitter) and crowdsourcing ...
The need for larger sample sizes and ready access to a diverse group of participants has seen many r...
Crowdsourcing offers researchers ready access to large numbers of participants, while enabling the p...
Crowd work platforms such as MTurk have been leveraged by academic scholars to conduct research and ...
Crowdsourcing data collection with research participants from online labor markets is now well estab...
Crowdsourcing data collection from research participants recruited from online labor markets is now ...
In this commentary, we respond to Burnette et al.’s (2021) paper, which gives significant practical ...
Micro-task crowdsourcing marketplaces like Figure Eight (F8) connect a large pool of workers to empl...
The use of crowdworkers in NLP research is growing rapidly, in tandem with the exponential increase ...
Crowdsourcing data through online marketplaces such as Amazon Mechanical Turk poses new challenges ...
This paper describes an exact replication of a study by Deng, Joshi, & Galliers (2016) of crowd work...
Data collection in consumer research has progressively moved away from traditional samples (e.g., un...
At the most recent convention of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, there were three...
In the social and cognitive sciences, crowdsourcing provides up to half of all research participants...
This study is a replication of one of two studies found in “Beyond the Turk: Alternative platforms f...
New technologies like large-scale social media sides (e.g., Facebook and Twitter) and crowdsourcing ...
The need for larger sample sizes and ready access to a diverse group of participants has seen many r...
Crowdsourcing offers researchers ready access to large numbers of participants, while enabling the p...
Crowd work platforms such as MTurk have been leveraged by academic scholars to conduct research and ...
Crowdsourcing data collection with research participants from online labor markets is now well estab...
Crowdsourcing data collection from research participants recruited from online labor markets is now ...
In this commentary, we respond to Burnette et al.’s (2021) paper, which gives significant practical ...
Micro-task crowdsourcing marketplaces like Figure Eight (F8) connect a large pool of workers to empl...
The use of crowdworkers in NLP research is growing rapidly, in tandem with the exponential increase ...
Crowdsourcing data through online marketplaces such as Amazon Mechanical Turk poses new challenges ...
This paper describes an exact replication of a study by Deng, Joshi, & Galliers (2016) of crowd work...
Data collection in consumer research has progressively moved away from traditional samples (e.g., un...
At the most recent convention of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, there were three...
In the social and cognitive sciences, crowdsourcing provides up to half of all research participants...
This study is a replication of one of two studies found in “Beyond the Turk: Alternative platforms f...