Menu

Iterative Learning for Reliable Crowdsourcing Systems

calendar icon Jan 25, 2012 7200 views
split view icon
video icon
presentation icon
video with chapters icon
video thumbnail
Pause
Mute
speed icon
speed icon
0.25
0.5
0.75
1
1.25
1.5
1.75
2

Crowdsourcing systems, in which tasks are electronically distributed to numerous "information piece-workers", have emerged as an effective paradigm for human-powered solving of large scale problems in domains such as image classification, data entry, optical character recognition, recommendation, and proofreading. Because these low-paid workers can be unreliable, nearly all crowdsourcers must devise schemes to increase confidence in their answers, typically by assigning each task multiple times and combining the answers in some way such as majority voting. In this paper, we consider a general model of such crowdsourcing tasks, and pose the problem of minimizing the total price (i.e., number of task assignments) that must be paid to achieve a target overall reliability. We give new algorithms for deciding which tasks to assign to which workers and for inferring correct answers from the workers’ answers. We show that our algorithm significantly outperforms majority voting and, in fact, are asymptotically optimal through comparison to an oracle that knows the reliability of every worker.

RELATED CATEGORIES

MORE VIDEOS FROM THE SAME CATEGORIES

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International license.