Datta, D and Banks, D (2021). Was There Any Widespread Fraud in 2020 Presidential Election? What does Benford's Law say?. Journal of Student Research (High School Edition) 10(3), pp. .
This work cites the following items of the Benford Online Bibliography:
Benford, F (1938). The law of anomalous numbers. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 78, No. 4 (Mar. 31, 1938), pp. 551-572.
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Berton, L (1995). He’s Got Their Number: Scholar Uses Math to Foil Financial Fraud. The Wall Street Journal, p. B1, July 10.
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Carslaw, CAPN (1988). Anomalies in Income Numbers: Evidence of Goal Oriented Behavior. The Accounting Review 63(2), pp. 321-327.
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Diekmann, A (2007). Not the First Digit! Using Benford's Law to Detect Fraudulent Scientific Data. Journal of Applied Statistics 34(3), pp. 321-329. ISSN/ISBN:0266-4763. DOI:10.1080/02664760601004940.
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Mebane, WR Jr (2009). Note on the presidential election in Iran, June 2009. updated notes on author's website.
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Newcomb, S (1881). Note on the frequency of use of the different digits in natural numbers. American Journal of Mathematics 4(1), pp. 39-40. ISSN/ISBN:0002-9327. DOI:10.2307/2369148.
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Nigrini, MJ (1996). A taxpayer compliance application of Benford’s law. Journal of the American Taxation Association 18(1), pp. 72-91.
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Schäfer, C, Schräpler, J-P, Müller, KR and Wagner GG (2004). Automatic Identification of Faked and Fraudulent Interviews in Surveys by Two Different Methods. Discussion paper 441, DIW Berlin (German Institute for Economic Research). ISSN/ISBN:1619-4535.
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