OpenAlex Citation Counts

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OpenAlex is a bibliographic catalogue of scientific papers, authors and institutions accessible in open access mode, named after the Library of Alexandria. It's citation coverage is excellent and I hope you will find utility in this listing of citing articles!

If you click the article title, you'll navigate to the article, as listed in CrossRef. If you click the Open Access links, you'll navigate to the "best Open Access location". Clicking the citation count will open this listing for that article. Lastly at the bottom of the page, you'll find basic pagination options.

Requested Article:

Can a Robot Lie? Exploring the Folk Concept of Lying as Applied to Artificial Agents
Markus Kneer
Cognitive Science (2021) Vol. 45, Iss. 10
Open Access | Times Cited: 24

Showing 24 citing articles:

Can Artificial Intelligence Make Art?: Folk Intuitions as to whether AI-driven Robots Can Be Viewed as Artists and Produce Art
Elzė Sigutė Mikalonytė, Markus Kneer
ACM Transactions on Human-Robot Interaction (2022) Vol. 11, Iss. 4, pp. 1-19
Open Access | Times Cited: 35

The Emerging Social Status of Generative AI: Vocabularies of AI Competence in Public Discourse
Emanuela Bran, Cosima Rughiniş, Gheorghe Nadoleanu, et al.
(2023), pp. 391-398
Closed Access | Times Cited: 14

Intelligence brings responsibility - Even smart AI assistants are held responsible
Louis Longin, Bahador Bahrami, Ophélia Deroy
iScience (2023) Vol. 26, Iss. 8, pp. 107494-107494
Open Access | Times Cited: 11

Command responsibility in military AI contexts: balancing theory and practicality
Ann‐Katrien Oimann, Adriana Salatino
AI and Ethics (2024)
Open Access | Times Cited: 4

Rethinking The Replacement of Physicians with AI
Hanhui Xu, Kyle Michael James Shuttleworth
American Philosophical Quarterly (2025) Vol. 62, Iss. 1, pp. 17-31
Closed Access

How do people judge the immorality of artificial intelligence versus humans committing moral wrongs in real-world situations?
Abigail Wilson, Courtney Stefanik, Daniel B. Shank
Computers in Human Behavior Reports (2022) Vol. 8, pp. 100229-100229
Open Access | Times Cited: 14

What Might Machines Mean?
Mitchell Green, Jan G. Michel
Minds and Machines (2022) Vol. 32, Iss. 2, pp. 323-338
Open Access | Times Cited: 13

Humans Vs. Service Robots as Social Actors in Persuasion Settings
Heekyung Lee, Youjae Yi
Journal of Service Research (2024)
Closed Access | Times Cited: 2

Is Your Computer Lying? AI and Deception
Noreen Herzfeld
Sophia (2023) Vol. 62, Iss. 4, pp. 665-678
Closed Access | Times Cited: 5

Human-Social Robot Interaction in the Light of ToM and Metacognitive Functions
Victoria Bamicha, Athanasios Drigas
Scientific Electronic Archives (2024) Vol. 17, Iss. 5
Open Access | Times Cited: 1

Responsibility Gaps and Technology: Old Wine in New Bottles?
Ann‐Katrien Oimann, Fabio Tollon
Journal of Applied Philosophy (2024)
Open Access | Times Cited: 1

Making Trust Safe for AI? Non-agential Trust as a Conceptual Engineering Problem
Juri Viehoff
Philosophy & Technology (2023) Vol. 36, Iss. 4
Open Access | Times Cited: 3

The conductor model of consciousness, our neuromorphic twins, and the human-AI deal
Federico Benitez, Cyriel M. A. Pennartz, Walter Senn
(2023)
Open Access | Times Cited: 3

Evaluating People’s Perception of Trust of a Deceptive Robot with Theory of Mind in an Assistive Gaming Scenario
Alessandra De Rossi, Silvia Rossi
(2023) Vol. 1, pp. 18-23
Closed Access | Times Cited: 2

Ethical Aspects of Faking Emotions in Chatbots and Social Robots*
Bipin Indurkhya
(2023), pp. 1719-1724
Open Access | Times Cited: 2

Interpreting ordinary uses of psychological and moral terms in the AI domain
Hyungrae Noh
Synthese (2023) Vol. 201, Iss. 6
Closed Access | Times Cited: 2

The conductor model of consciousness, our neuromorphic twins, and the human-AI deal
Federico Benitez, Cyriel M. A. Pennartz, Walter Senn
AI and Ethics (2024)
Open Access

Dishonesty Through AI: Can Robots Engage in Lying Behavior?
Lars Witell, Hannah Snyder
Springer eBooks (2024), pp. 233-246
Closed Access

Lying about the future: Shuar-Achuar epistemic norms, predictions, and commitments
Alejandro Erut, Kristopher M. Smith, H. Clark Barrett
Cognition (2023) Vol. 239, pp. 105552-105552
Closed Access | Times Cited: 1

Responsibility Gaps and Retributive Dispositions: Evidence from the US, Japan and Germany
Markus Kneer, Markus Christen
Science and Engineering Ethics (2024) Vol. 30, Iss. 6
Open Access

A Method to Check that Participants Really are Imagining Artificial Minds When Ascribing Mental States
Hal Ashton, Matija Franklin
Communications in computer and information science (2022), pp. 470-474
Closed Access | Times Cited: 2

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