Carolin M. Schuster

CL
h-index16
4papers
53citations
Novelty36%
AI Score28

4 Papers

CLOct 20, 2024Code
A Comprehensive Evaluation of Cognitive Biases in LLMs

Simon Malberg, Roman Poletukhin, Carolin M. Schuster et al.

We present a large-scale evaluation of 30 cognitive biases in 20 state-of-the-art large language models (LLMs) under various decision-making scenarios. Our contributions include a novel general-purpose test framework for reliable and large-scale generation of tests for LLMs, a benchmark dataset with 30,000 tests for detecting cognitive biases in LLMs, and a comprehensive assessment of the biases found in the 20 evaluated LLMs. Our work confirms and broadens previous findings suggesting the presence of cognitive biases in LLMs by reporting evidence of all 30 tested biases in at least some of the 20 LLMs. We publish our framework code to encourage future research on biases in LLMs: https://github.com/simonmalberg/cognitive-biases-in-llms

CLSep 24, 2024
Tuning Into Bias: A Computational Study of Gender Bias in Song Lyrics

Danqing Chen, Adithi Satish, Rasul Khanbayov et al.

The application of text mining methods is becoming increasingly prevalent, particularly within Humanities and Computational Social Sciences, as well as in a broader range of disciplines. This paper presents an analysis of gender bias in English song lyrics using topic modeling and bias measurement techniques. Leveraging BERTopic, we cluster a dataset of 537,553 English songs into distinct topics and analyze their temporal evolution. Our results reveal a significant thematic shift in song lyrics over time, transitioning from romantic themes to a heightened focus on the sexualization of women. Additionally, we observe a substantial prevalence of profanity and misogynistic content across various topics, with a particularly high concentration in the largest thematic cluster. To further analyse gender bias across topics and genres in a quantitative way, we employ the Single Category Word Embedding Association Test (SC-WEAT) to calculate bias scores for word embeddings trained on the most prominent topics as well as individual genres. The results indicate a consistent male bias in words associated with intelligence and strength, while appearance and weakness words show a female bias. Further analysis highlights variations in these biases across topics, illustrating the interplay between thematic content and gender stereotypes in song lyrics.

CLNov 25, 2024
Profiling Bias in LLMs: Stereotype Dimensions in Contextual Word Embeddings

Carolin M. Schuster, Maria-Alexandra Dinisor, Shashwat Ghatiwala et al.

Large language models (LLMs) are the foundation of the current successes of artificial intelligence (AI), however, they are unavoidably biased. To effectively communicate the risks and encourage mitigation efforts these models need adequate and intuitive descriptions of their discriminatory properties, appropriate for all audiences of AI. We suggest bias profiles with respect to stereotype dimensions based on dictionaries from social psychology research. Along these dimensions we investigate gender bias in contextual embeddings, across contexts and layers, and generate stereotype profiles for twelve different LLMs, demonstrating their intuition and use case for exposing and visualizing bias.

CLOct 28, 2024
Semantic Component Analysis: Introducing Multi-Topic Distributions to Clustering-Based Topic Modeling

Florian Eichin, Carolin M. Schuster, Georg Groh et al.

Topic modeling is a key method in text analysis, but existing approaches fail to efficiently scale to large datasets or are limited by assuming one topic per document. Overcoming these limitations, we introduce Semantic Component Analysis (SCA), a topic modeling technique that discovers multiple topics per sample by introducing a decomposition step to the clustering-based topic modeling framework. We evaluate SCA on Twitter datasets in English, Hausa and Chinese. There, it achieves competitive coherence and diversity compared to BERTopic, while uncovering at least double the topics and maintaining a noise rate close to zero. We also find that SCA outperforms the LLM-based TopicGPT in scenarios with similar compute budgets. SCA thus provides an effective and efficient approach for topic modeling of large datasets.