A Case for a Range of Acceptable Annotations

Jennimaria Palomaki, Olivia Rhinehart, Michael Tseng. A Case for a Range of Acceptable Annotations. In Lora Aroyo, Anca Dumitrache, Praveen Paritosh, Alexander J. Quinn, Chris Welty, Alessandro Checco, Gianluca Demartini, Ujwal Gadiraju, Cristina Sarasua, editors, Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Subjectivity, Ambiguity and Disagreement in Crowdsourcing, and Short Paper Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Disentangling the Relation Between Crowdsourcing and Bias Management (SAD 2018 and CrowdBias 2018) co-located the 6th AAAI Conference on Human Computation and Crowdsourcing (HCOMP 2018), Zürich, Switzerland, July 5, 2018. Volume 2276 of CEUR Workshop Proceedings, pages 19-31, CEUR-WS.org, 2018. [doi]

@inproceedings{PalomakiRT18,
  title = {A Case for a Range of Acceptable Annotations},
  author = {Jennimaria Palomaki and Olivia Rhinehart and Michael Tseng},
  year = {2018},
  url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2276/paper3.pdf},
  researchr = {https://researchr.org/publication/PalomakiRT18},
  cites = {0},
  citedby = {0},
  pages = {19-31},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Subjectivity, Ambiguity and Disagreement in Crowdsourcing, and Short Paper Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Disentangling the Relation Between Crowdsourcing and Bias Management (SAD 2018 and CrowdBias 2018) co-located the 6th AAAI Conference on Human Computation and Crowdsourcing (HCOMP 2018), Zürich, Switzerland, July 5, 2018},
  editor = {Lora Aroyo and Anca Dumitrache and Praveen Paritosh and Alexander J. Quinn and Chris Welty and Alessandro Checco and Gianluca Demartini and Ujwal Gadiraju and Cristina Sarasua},
  volume = {2276},
  series = {CEUR Workshop Proceedings},
  publisher = {CEUR-WS.org},
}