Can the crowd tell how I feel? Trait empathy and ethnic background in a visual pain judgment task

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Abstract

Many advocate for artificial agents to be empathic. Crowdsourcing could help, by facilitating human-in-the-loop approaches and data set creation for visual emotion recognition algorithms. Although crowdsourcing has been employed successfully for a range of tasks, it is not clear how effective crowdsourcing is when the task involves subjective rating of emotions. We examined relationships between demographics, empathy, and ethnic identity in pain emotion recognition tasks. Amazon MTurkers viewed images of strangers in painful settings, and tagged subjects’ emotions. They rated their level of pain arousal and confidence in their responses, and completed tests to gauge trait empathy and ethnic identity. We found that Caucasian participants were less confident than others, even when viewing other Caucasians in pain. Gender correlated to word choices for describing images, though not to pain arousal or confidence. The results underscore the need for verified information on crowdworkers, to harness diversity effectively for metadata generation tasks.

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Matsangidou, M., Otterbacher, J., Ang, C. S., & Zaphiris, P. (2018). Can the crowd tell how I feel? Trait empathy and ethnic background in a visual pain judgment task. Universal Access in the Information Society, 17(3), 649–661. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10209-018-0611-y

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