Published on 16.11.12 in Vol 14, No 6 (2012): Nov-Dec
Works citing "How Should Debriefing Be Undertaken in Web-Based Studies? Findings From a Randomized Controlled Trial"
According to Crossref, the following articles are citing this article (DOI 10.2196/jmir.2186):
(note that this is only a small subset of citations)
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Kypri K, Wilson A, Attia J, Sheeran PJ, McCambridge J. Effects of study design and allocation on self-reported alcohol consumption: randomized trial. Trials 2015;16(1)
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McCambridge J, Kypri K, Bendtsen P, Porter J. The Use of Deception in Public Health Behavioral Intervention Trials: A Case Study of Three Online Alcohol Trials. The American Journal of Bioethics 2013;13(11):39
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McCambridge J, Kypri K, Elbourne D. In randomization we trust? There are overlooked problems in experimenting with people in behavioral intervention trials. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2014;67(3):247
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Wang JY, Kitsis EA. Tangling the Web: Deception in Online Research. The American Journal of Bioethics 2013;13(11):59
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Van Quaquebeke N, Salem M, van Dijke M, Wenzel R. Conducting organizational survey and experimental research online: From convenient to ambitious in study designs, recruiting, and data quality. Organizational Psychology Review 2022;12(3):268
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Verbeke K, Krawczyk T, Baeyens D, Piasecki J, Borry P. Informed Consent and Debriefing When Deceiving Participants: A Systematic Review of Research Ethics Guidelines. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics 2023;18(3):118
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Ulfsdotter Gunnarsson K, Collier ES, McCambridge J, Bendtsen M. Randomized study of two different consent procedures on recall: a study within a digital alcohol intervention trial. Trials 2024;25(1)
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