I'm taking a few approaches to this myself, and I had some questions about the best way to do some things. (Tagging "EA Librarian" on this in particular)
- I'm considering (discussion here) existing lists, reviews, and syllabi such as:
- GPI research agenda (includes many posed questions)
- Open Philanthropy "questions that might affect our grantmaking"
- Pablo Stafforini's syllabi, David Rhys-Bernard's syllabus
What 'lists' in this category am I missing?
- What are the best tools for finding:
- the most prominent EA-linked authors in economics, social science, and policy impact
- the papers that a relevant author cites the most? (E.g., 'which papers does David Roodman cite most often'?)
- the papers that a relevant organization cites the most?
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Where and how (perhaps outside EA circles) should I promote this crowdsourcing and this bounty? E.g., which particular academic boards/societies/groups should we share this with? What other incentives should we offer?
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How could GPT3 or Elicit be used to help in this, if at all?