Consistency is a practical metric that evaluates an instrument's reliability based on its ability to yield the same output when repeatedly given a particular input. Despite its broad usage, little is understood about the feasibility of using consistency as a measure of worker reliability in crowdwork. In this paper, we explore the viability of measuring a worker's reliability by their ability to conform to themselves. We introduce and describe Deja Vu, a mechanism for dynamically generating task queues with consistency probes to measure the consistency of workers who repeat the same task twice. We present a study that utilizes Deja Vu to examine how generic characteristics of the duplicate task - such as placement, difficulty, and transformation - affect a workers task consistency in the context of two unique object detection tasks. Our findings provide insight into the design and use of consistency-based reliability metrics.
CITATION STYLE
Williams, A. C., Goh, J., Willis, C. G., Ellison, A. M., Brusuelas, J. H., Davis, C. C., & Law, E. (2017). Deja Vu: CharacterizingWorker Reliability Using Task Consistency. In Proceedings of the 5th AAAI Conference on Human Computation and Crowdsourcing, HCOMP 2017 (pp. 197–205). AAAI Press. https://doi.org/10.1609/hcomp.v5i1.13307
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