J
John Horton
Researcher at New York University
Publications - 115
Citations - 21978
John Horton is an academic researcher from New York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wage & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 108 publications receiving 19671 citations. Previous affiliations of John Horton include National Bureau of Economic Research & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Toxicity and response criteria of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group
Martin M. Oken,Richard H. Creech,Douglass C. Tormey,John Horton,Thomas E. Davis,Eleanor T. McFadden,Paul P. Carbone +6 more
TL;DR: The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group criteria for toxicity and response are presented to facilitate future reference and to encourage further standardization among those conducting clinical trials.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prognostic effect of weight loss prior tochemotherapy in cancer patients
William D. Dewys,Colin B. Begg,Philip T. Lavin,Pierre R. Band,John M. Bennett,Joseph R. Bertino,Martin H. Cohen,Harold O. Douglass,Paul F. Engstrom,Ediz Z. Ezdinli,John Horton,Gerhard J. Johnson,Charles G. Moertel,Martin M. Oken,Charles P. Perlia,Charles Rosenbaum,Murray N. Silverstein,Roland T. Skeel,Robert W. Sponzo,Douglass C. Tormey +19 more
TL;DR: The prognostic effect of weight loss prior to chemotherapy was analyzed using data from 3,047 patients enrolled in 12 chemotherapy protocols of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group and increased with increasing number of anatomic sites involved with metastases, but within categories of Anatomic involvement, weight loss was associated with decreased median survival.
Posted Content
The Online Laboratory: Conducting Experiments in a Real Labor Market
TL;DR: The views on the potential role that online experiments can play within the social sciences are presented, and software development priorities and best practices are recommended.
Journal ArticleDOI
The online laboratory: conducting experiments in a real labor market
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use an online labor market to replicate three classic experiments and find quantitative agreement between levels of cooperation in a prisoner's dilemma played online and in the physical laboratory.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
The future of crowd work
Aniket Kittur,Jeffrey V. Nickerson,Michael S. Bernstein,Elizabeth M. Gerber,Aaron Shaw,John Zimmerman,Matthew Lease,John Horton +7 more
TL;DR: This paper outlines a framework that will enable crowd work that is complex, collaborative, and sustainable, and lays out research challenges in twelve major areas: workflow, task assignment, hierarchy, real-time response, synchronous collaboration, quality control, crowds guiding AIs, AIs guiding crowds, platforms, job design, reputation, and motivation.