Disentangling Perceptions of Offensiveness: Cultural and Moral Correlates
Aida Davani, Mark D\'iaz, Dylan Baker, Vinodkumar Prabhakaran

TL;DR
This study explores how cultural and moral differences influence perceptions of offensiveness, emphasizing the importance of integrating diverse moral values into AI moderation tools for a more inclusive approach.
Contribution
It introduces a large-scale cross-cultural analysis linking moral values to offensiveness perceptions, highlighting the need to consider socio-cultural factors in AI moderation.
Findings
Significant cross-cultural differences in offensiveness perceptions.
Moral concerns about Care and Purity influence these perceptions.
Cultural context shapes moral judgments of offensive language.
Abstract
Perception of offensiveness is inherently subjective, shaped by the lived experiences and socio-cultural values of the perceivers. Recent years have seen substantial efforts to build AI-based tools that can detect offensive language at scale, as a means to moderate social media platforms, and to ensure safety of conversational AI technologies such as ChatGPT and Bard. However, existing approaches treat this task as a technical endeavor, built on top of data annotated for offensiveness by a global crowd workforce without any attention to the crowd workers' provenance or the values their perceptions reflect. We argue that cultural and psychological factors play a vital role in the cognitive processing of offensiveness, which is critical to consider in this context. We re-frame the task of determining offensiveness as essentially a matter of moral judgment -- deciding the boundaries of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Misinformation and Its Impacts
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
