Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Davenport, Tiffany C.
Gerber, Alan S.
Green, Donald P.
Larimer, Christopher W.
Mann, Christopher B.
and
Panagopoulos, Costas
2010.
The Enduring Effects of Social Pressure: Tracking Campaign Experiments Over a Series of Elections.
Political Behavior,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 3,
p.
423.
Green, Donald P.
and
Gerber, Alan S.
2010.
Introduction to Social Pressure and Voting: New Experimental Evidence.
Political Behavior,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 3,
p.
331.
Faas, Thorsten
and
Huber, Sascha
2010.
Experimente in der Politikwissenschaft: Vom Mauerblümchen zum Mainstream.
Politische Vierteljahresschrift,
Vol. 51,
Issue. 4,
p.
721.
Druckman, James N.
Green, Donald P.
Kuklinski, James H.
and
Lupia, Arthur
2011.
Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science.
p.
15.
Imai, Kosuke
2011.
Introduction to the Virtual Issue: Past and Future Research Agenda on Causal Inference.
Political Analysis,
Vol. 19,
Issue. V2,
p.
1.
Aronow, Peter M.
Gerber, Alan
Green, Donald P.
and
Kern, Holger L.
2013.
Double Sampling for Missing Outcome Data in Randomized Experiments.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Haynes, Laura C.
Green, Donald P.
Gallagher, Rory
John, Peter
and
Torgerson, David J.
2013.
Collection of Delinquent Fines: An Adaptive Randomized Trial to Assess the Effectiveness of Alternative Text Messages.
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 4,
p.
718.
Green, Donald P.
McGrath, Mary C.
and
Aronow, Peter M.
2013.
Field Experiments and the Study of Voter Turnout.
Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties,
Vol. 23,
Issue. 1,
p.
27.
LaCour, Michael J.
and
Green, Donald P.
2014.
When contact changes minds: An experiment on transmission of support for gay equality.
Science,
Vol. 346,
Issue. 6215,
p.
1366.
Broockman, David E.
and
Green, Donald P.
2014.
Do Online Advertisements Increase Political Candidates’ Name Recognition or Favorability? Evidence from Randomized Field Experiments.
Political Behavior,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 2,
p.
263.
Teresi, Holly
and
Michelson, Melissa R.
2015.
Wired to mobilize: The effect of social networking messages on voter turnout.
The Social Science Journal,
Vol. 52,
Issue. 2,
p.
195.
Broockman, David
and
Kalla, Joshua
2016.
Durably reducing transphobia: A field experiment on door-to-door canvassing.
Science,
Vol. 352,
Issue. 6282,
p.
220.
Green, Donald P
and
Schwam-Baird, Michael
2016.
Mobilization, participation, and American democracy.
Party Politics,
Vol. 22,
Issue. 2,
p.
158.
Green, Donald P.
and
Gerber, Alan S.
2016.
Voter Mobilization, Experimentation, and Translational Social Science.
Perspectives on Politics,
Vol. 14,
Issue. 3,
p.
738.
Foos, Florian
and
de Rooij, Eline A.
2017.
All in the Family: Partisan Disagreement and Electoral Mobilization in Intimate Networks—A Spillover Experiment.
American Journal of Political Science,
Vol. 61,
Issue. 2,
p.
289.
Gerber, Alan S.
Huber, Gregory A.
Fang, Albert H.
and
Gooch, Andrew
2017.
The Generalizability of Social Pressure Effects on Turnout Across High-Salience Electoral Contexts: Field Experimental Evidence From 1.96 Million Citizens in 17 States.
American Politics Research,
Vol. 45,
Issue. 4,
p.
533.
Butler, Daniel M.
and
Crabtree, Charles
2017.
Moving Beyond Measurement: Adapting Audit Studies to Test Bias-Reducing Interventions.
Journal of Experimental Political Science,
Vol. 4,
Issue. 1,
p.
57.
Coppock, Alexander
Gerber, Alan S.
Green, Donald P.
and
Kern, Holger L.
2017.
Combining Double Sampling and Bounds to Address Nonignorable Missing Outcomes in Randomized Experiments.
Political Analysis,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 2,
p.
188.
Kling, Daniel
and
Stratmann, Thomas
2020.
Repeated treatment in a GOTV field experiment: Distinguishing between intensive and extensive margin effects.
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization,
Vol. 175,
Issue. ,
p.
413.
Zelizer, Adam
2020.
How Many Robocalls are too Many? Results from a Large-Scale Field Experiment.
Journal of Political Marketing,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 4,
p.
405.