Student's t-Distribution: On Measuring the Inter-Rater Reliability When the Observations are Scarce
This addresses the need for more meaningful, transparent, and trustworthy evaluation in NLP and other fields where human judgments are used but data is limited.
The paper tackles the problem of evaluating inter-rater reliability (IRR) in tasks like translation quality evaluation when observational data is scarce, by introducing a method based on Student's t-Distribution that allows measurement with as few as two data points and improves evaluation confidence with additional observations.
In natural language processing (NLP) we always rely on human judgement as the golden quality evaluation method. However, there has been an ongoing debate on how to better evaluate inter-rater reliability (IRR) levels for certain evaluation tasks, such as translation quality evaluation (TQE), especially when the data samples (observations) are very scarce. In this work, we first introduce the study on how to estimate the confidence interval for the measurement value when only one data (evaluation) point is available. Then, this leads to our example with two human-generated observational scores, for which, we introduce ``Student's \textit{t}-Distribution'' method and explain how to use it to measure the IRR score using only these two data points, as well as the confidence intervals (CIs) of the quality evaluation. We give quantitative analysis on how the evaluation confidence can be greatly improved by introducing more observations, even if only one extra observation. We encourage researchers to report their IRR scores in all possible means, e.g. using Student's \textit{t}-Distribution method whenever possible; thus making the NLP evaluation more meaningful, transparent, and trustworthy. This \textit{t}-Distribution method can be also used outside of NLP fields to measure IRR level for trustworthy evaluation of experimental investigations, whenever the observational data is scarce. Keywords: Inter-Rater Reliability (IRR); Scarce Observations; Confidence Intervals (CIs); Natural Language Processing (NLP); Translation Quality Evaluation (TQE); Student's \textit{t}-Distribution