In crowdsourcing when there is a lack of verification for contributed answers, output agreement mechanisms are often used to incentivize participants to provide truthful answers when the correct answer is hold by the majority. In this paper, we focus on using output agreement mechanisms to elicit effort, in addition to eliciting truthful answers, from a population of workers. We consider a setting where workers have heterogeneous cost of effort exertion and examine the data requester’s problem of deciding the reward level in output agreement for optimal elicitation. In particular, when the requester knows the cost distribution, we derive the optimal reward level for output agreement mechanisms. This is achieved by first characterizing Bayes...
Crowdsourcing systems are complex not only because of the huge number of potential strategies for as...
Information Elicitation Without Verification (IEWV) refers to the problem of eliciting high-accuracy...
Due to the randomness of participants’ movement and the selfishness and dishonesty of individuals in...
Peer prediction mechanisms are often adopted to elicit truthful contributions from crowd workers whe...
Incentive is key to the success of crowdsourcing which heavily depends on the level of user particip...
What price should be offered to a worker for a task in an online labor market? How can one enable wo...
Abstract—Crowdsourcing systems allocate tasks to a group of workers over the Internet, which have be...
Crowdsourcing has the advantages of being cost-effective and saving time, which is a typical embodim...
An important class of game-theoretic incentive mechanisms for eliciting effort from a crowd are the ...
Crowdsourcing can be modeled as a principal-agent problem in which the principal (crowdsourcer) desi...
International audienceCrowdsourcing is a way to solve problems that need human contribution. Crowdso...
In this thesis, we address several generic problems concerned with procurement of tasks from a crowd...
Many crowdsourcing scenarios are heterogeneous in the sense that, not only the workers\u27 types (e....
While winner-take-all crowdsourcing contests are wide spread in practice, several researchers have o...
Mechanical Turk, and etc.) emerged in recent years that allow requesters from all around the world t...
Crowdsourcing systems are complex not only because of the huge number of potential strategies for as...
Information Elicitation Without Verification (IEWV) refers to the problem of eliciting high-accuracy...
Due to the randomness of participants’ movement and the selfishness and dishonesty of individuals in...
Peer prediction mechanisms are often adopted to elicit truthful contributions from crowd workers whe...
Incentive is key to the success of crowdsourcing which heavily depends on the level of user particip...
What price should be offered to a worker for a task in an online labor market? How can one enable wo...
Abstract—Crowdsourcing systems allocate tasks to a group of workers over the Internet, which have be...
Crowdsourcing has the advantages of being cost-effective and saving time, which is a typical embodim...
An important class of game-theoretic incentive mechanisms for eliciting effort from a crowd are the ...
Crowdsourcing can be modeled as a principal-agent problem in which the principal (crowdsourcer) desi...
International audienceCrowdsourcing is a way to solve problems that need human contribution. Crowdso...
In this thesis, we address several generic problems concerned with procurement of tasks from a crowd...
Many crowdsourcing scenarios are heterogeneous in the sense that, not only the workers\u27 types (e....
While winner-take-all crowdsourcing contests are wide spread in practice, several researchers have o...
Mechanical Turk, and etc.) emerged in recent years that allow requesters from all around the world t...
Crowdsourcing systems are complex not only because of the huge number of potential strategies for as...
Information Elicitation Without Verification (IEWV) refers to the problem of eliciting high-accuracy...
Due to the randomness of participants’ movement and the selfishness and dishonesty of individuals in...