Reliance and Automation for Human-AI Collaborative Data Labeling Conflict Resolution

Author:

Brachman Michelle1,Ashktorab Zahra2,Desmond Michael2,Duesterwald Evelyn2,Dugan Casey1,Joshi Narendra Nath3,Pan Qian1,Sharma Aabhas1

Affiliation:

1. IBM Research, Cambridge, MA, USA

2. IBM Research, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA

3. Adobe, San Jose, CA, USA

Abstract

Human data labeling with multiple labelers and the resulting conflict resolution remains the norm for many enterprise machine learning pipelines. Conflict resolution can be a time-intensive and costly process. Our goal was to study how human-AI collaboration can improve conflict resolution, by enabling users to automate groups of conflict resolution tasks. However, little is known about whether and how people will rely on automation during conflict resolution. Currently, automation commonly uses labelers' majority vote labels for conflict resolution, as the top chosen label by most labelers is often correct. We envisioned a system where an AI would assist in finding cases where the labeler majority vote was wrong and where automation is supported for batches or groups of conflicts. In order to understand whether humans could use labeler and AI information effectively, we investigated how and when users rely on labeler and AI information and on automated group conflict resolution. We ran a study with 144 Mechanical Turk workers. We found that automation increased users' accuracy/time, use of automated conflict resolution was relatively similar regardless of whether the automation was based on labeler or AI selected labels, and providing labeler and AI selected labels may reduce inappropriate reliance on automation.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Human-Computer Interaction,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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