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Crowdsourcing Utilizing Subgroup Structure of Latent Factor Modeling

Date: 2024-03-08
Speaker: Annie Qu
Speaker Intro:

Annie Qu is Chancellor’s Professor, Department of Statistics, University of California Irvine. Qu's research focuses on solving fundamental issues regarding structured and unstructured large-scale data, and developing cutting-edge statistical methods and theory in machine learning and algorithms on personalized medicine, text mining, recommender systems, medical imaging data and network data analyses for complex heterogeneous data. The newly developed methods are able to extract essential and relevant information from large volume high-dimensional data. Her research has impacts in many fields such as biomedical studies, genomic research, public health research, social and political sciences. She is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, and a Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science. She is also a recipient of Medallion Award and Lecturer. She is JASA Theory and Methods co-editor in 2023-2025. 

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Description:

Crowdsourcing has emerged as an alternative solution for collecting large scale labels. However, the majority of recruited workers are not domain experts, so their contributed labels could be noisy. In this paper, we propose a two-stage model to predict the true labels for multicategory classification tasks in crowdsourcing. In the first stage, we fit the observed labels with a latent factor model and incorporate subgroup structures for both tasks and workers through a multi-centroid grouping penalty. Group-specific rotations are introduced to align workers with different task categories to solve multicategory crowdsourcingtasks. In the second stage, we propose a concordance-based approach to identify high-quality worker subgroups who are relied upon to assign labels to tasks. In theory, we show the estimation consistency of the latent factors and the prediction consistency of the proposed method. The simulation studies show that the proposed method outperforms the existing competitive methods, assuming the subgroup structures within tasks and workers. We also demonstrate the application of the proposed method to real world problems and show its superiority.

Time: 2023-04-24 (Monday) 10:00-11:30
Venue: Room 105, Qunxian Building II
Organizer: 新浦京8883n平台下载研究生院、新浦京8883n平台下载、王亚南经济研究院、邹至庄经济研究院
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