Design Choices for Crowdsourcing Implicit Discourse Relations: Revealing the Biases Introduced by Task Design

Author:

Pyatkin Valentina1,Yung Frances2,Scholman Merel C. J.34,Tsarfaty Reut5,Dagan Ido6,Demberg Vera7

Affiliation:

1. Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. pyatkiv@biu.ac.il

2. Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. frances

3. Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. m.c.j.scholman@coli.uni-saarland.de

4. Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands

5. Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. reut.tsarfaty@biu.ac.il

6. Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. dagan@cs.biu.ac.il

7. Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. vera@coli.uni-saarland.de

Abstract

Abstract Disagreement in natural language annotation has mostly been studied from a perspective of biases introduced by the annotators and the annotation frameworks. Here, we propose to analyze another source of bias—task design bias, which has a particularly strong impact on crowdsourced linguistic annotations where natural language is used to elicit the interpretation of lay annotators. For this purpose we look at implicit discourse relation annotation, a task that has repeatedly been shown to be difficult due to the relations’ ambiguity. We compare the annotations of 1,200 discourse relations obtained using two distinct annotation tasks and quantify the biases of both methods across four different domains. Both methods are natural language annotation tasks designed for crowdsourcing. We show that the task design can push annotators towards certain relations and that some discourse relation senses can be better elicited with one or the other annotation approach. We also conclude that this type of bias should be taken into account when training and testing models.

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,Linguistics and Language,Human-Computer Interaction,Communication

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