MLHCJan 4, 2017

Probabilistic Multigraph Modeling for Improving the Quality of Crowdsourced Affective Data

arXiv:1701.01096v218 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of improving data quality in crowdsourced affective studies for researchers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing reliability models by adding regularity considerations.

The authors tackled the challenge of analyzing crowdsourced affective data by proposing a probabilistic model that jointly estimates participant reliability and human regularity, enabling robust analysis of large-scale emotion and aesthetic assessments.

We proposed a probabilistic approach to joint modeling of participants' reliability and humans' regularity in crowdsourced affective studies. Reliability measures how likely a subject will respond to a question seriously; and regularity measures how often a human will agree with other seriously-entered responses coming from a targeted population. Crowdsourcing-based studies or experiments, which rely on human self-reported affect, pose additional challenges as compared with typical crowdsourcing studies that attempt to acquire concrete non-affective labels of objects. The reliability of participants has been massively pursued for typical non-affective crowdsourcing studies, whereas the regularity of humans in an affective experiment in its own right has not been thoroughly considered. It has been often observed that different individuals exhibit different feelings on the same test question, which does not have a sole correct response in the first place. High reliability of responses from one individual thus cannot conclusively result in high consensus across individuals. Instead, globally testing consensus of a population is of interest to investigators. Built upon the agreement multigraph among tasks and workers, our probabilistic model differentiates subject regularity from population reliability. We demonstrate the method's effectiveness for in-depth robust analysis of large-scale crowdsourced affective data, including emotion and aesthetic assessments collected by presenting visual stimuli to human subjects.

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