Learning from Crowds by Modeling Common Confusions

Authors

  • Zhendong Chu University of Virginia
  • Jing Ma University of Virginia
  • Hongning Wang University of Virginia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v35i7.16730

Keywords:

Learning of Cost, Reliability, and Skill of Label, Learning Human Values and Preferences, Semi-Supervised Learning, Probabilistic Graphical Models

Abstract

Crowdsourcing provides a practical way to obtain large amounts of labeled data at a low cost. However, the annotation quality of annotators varies considerably, which imposes new challenges in learning a high-quality model from the crowdsourced annotations. In this work, we provide a new perspective to decompose annotation noise into common noise and individual noise and differentiate the source of confusion based on instance difficulty and annotator expertise on a per-instance-annotator basis. We realize this new crowdsourcing model by an end-to-end learning solution with two types of noise adaptation layers: one is shared across annotators to capture their commonly shared confusions, and the other one is pertaining to each annotator to realize individual confusion. To recognize the source of noise in each annotation, we use an auxiliary network to choose from the two noise adaptation layers with respect to both instances and annotators. Extensive experiments on both synthesized and real-world benchmarks demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed common noise adaptation solution.

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Published

2021-05-18

How to Cite

Chu, Z., Ma, J., & Wang, H. (2021). Learning from Crowds by Modeling Common Confusions. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 35(7), 5832-5840. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v35i7.16730

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Human-Computation and Crowd Sourcing