Approximating the crowd
The problem of "approximating the crowd" is that of estimating the crowd's majority opinion by querying only a subset of it. Algorithms that approximate the crowd can intelligently stretch a limited budget for a crowdsourcing task. We present an algorithm, "CrowdSense," that works in an online fashion where items come one at a time. CrowdSense dynamically samples subsets of the crowd based on an exploration/exploitation criterion. The algorithm produces a weighted combination of the subset's votes that approximates the crowd's opinion. We then introduce two variations of CrowdSense that make various distributional approximations to handle distinct crowd characteristics. In particular, the first algorithm makes a statistical independence approximation of the labelers for large crowds, whereas the second algorithm finds a lower bound on how often the current subcrowd agrees with the crowd's majority vote. Our experiments on CrowdSense and several baselines demonstrate that we can reliably approximate the entire crowd's vote by collecting opinions from a representative subset of the crowd. © 2014 The Author(s).
Duke Scholars
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- Artificial Intelligence & Image Processing
- 46 Information and computing sciences
- 0806 Information Systems
- 0804 Data Format
- 0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Artificial Intelligence & Image Processing
- 46 Information and computing sciences
- 0806 Information Systems
- 0804 Data Format
- 0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing