Georgios Chochlakis
2026
The Moral Foundations Reddit Corpus
Jackson P. Trager | Alireza S. Ziabari | Elnaz Rahmati | Aida Mostafazadeh Davani | Preni Golazizian | Farzan Karimi-Malekabadi | Ali Omrani | Zhihe Li | Brendan Kennedy | Georgios Chochlakis | Nils Karl Reimer | Melissa Reyes | Kesley Cheng | Mellow Wei | Christina Merrifield | Arta Khosravi | Evans Alvarez | Morteza Dehghani
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Jackson P. Trager | Alireza S. Ziabari | Elnaz Rahmati | Aida Mostafazadeh Davani | Preni Golazizian | Farzan Karimi-Malekabadi | Ali Omrani | Zhihe Li | Brendan Kennedy | Georgios Chochlakis | Nils Karl Reimer | Melissa Reyes | Kesley Cheng | Mellow Wei | Christina Merrifield | Arta Khosravi | Evans Alvarez | Morteza Dehghani
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Moral framing and sentiment can affect a variety of online and offline behaviors, including donation, environmental action, political engagement, and protest. Various computational methods in Natural Language Processing (NLP) have been used to detect moral sentiment from textual data, but achieving strong performance in such subjective tasks requires large, hand-annotated datasets. Previous corpora annotated for moral sentiment have proven valuable and have generated new insights both within NLP and across the social sciences, but have been limited to Twitter. To facilitate improving our understanding of the role of moral rhetoric, we present the Moral Foundations Reddit Corpus, a collection of 16,123 English Reddit comments that have been curated from 12 distinct subreddits, hand-annotated by at least three trained annotators for 8 categories of moral sentiment (i.e., Care, Proportionality, Equality, Purity, Authority, Loyalty, Thin Morality, Implicit/Explicit Morality) based on the updated Moral Foundations Theory (MFT) framework. We evaluate baselines using large language models (Llama3-8B, Ministral-8B) in zero-shot, few-shot, and PEFT (Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning) settings, comparing their performance to fine-tuned encoder-only models like BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers). The results show that LLMs continue to lag behind fine-tuned encoders on this subjective task, underscoring the ongoing need for human-annotated moral corpora for AI alignment evaluation
2025
Large Language Models Do Multi-Label Classification Differently
Marcus Ma | Georgios Chochlakis | Niyantha Maruthu Pandiyan | Jesse Thomason | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Marcus Ma | Georgios Chochlakis | Niyantha Maruthu Pandiyan | Jesse Thomason | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Multi-label classification is prevalent in real-world settings, but the behavior of Large Language Models (LLMs) in this setting is understudied. We investigate how autoregressive LLMs perform multi-label classification, focusing on subjective tasks, by analyzing the output distributions of the models at each label generation step. We find that the initial probability distribution for the first label often does not reflect the eventual final output, even in terms of relative order and find LLMs tend to suppress all but one label at each generation step. We further observe that as model scale increases, their token distributions exhibit lower entropy and higher single-label confidence, but the internal relative ranking of the labels improves. Finetuning methods such as supervised finetuning and reinforcement learning amplify this phenomenon. We introduce the task of distribution alignment for multi-label settings: aligning LLM-derived label distributions with empirical distributions estimated from annotator responses in subjective tasks. We propose both zero-shot and supervised methods which improve both alignment and predictive performance over existing approaches. We find one method – taking the max probability over all label generation distributions instead of just using the initial probability distribution – improves both distribution alignment and overall F1 classification without adding any additional computation.
Humans Hallucinate Too: Language Models Identify and Correct Subjective Annotation Errors With Label-in-a-Haystack Prompts
Georgios Chochlakis | Peter Wu | Tikka Arjun Singh Bedi | Marcus Ma | Kristina Lerman | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Georgios Chochlakis | Peter Wu | Tikka Arjun Singh Bedi | Marcus Ma | Kristina Lerman | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Modeling complex subjective tasks in Natural Language Processing, such as recognizing emotion and morality, is considerably challenging due to significant variation in human annotations. This variation often reflects reasonable differences in semantic interpretations rather than mere noise, necessitating methods to distinguish between legitimate subjectivity and error.We address this challenge by exploring label verification in these contexts using Large Language Models (LLMs). First, we propose a simple In-Context Learning binary filtering baseline that estimates the reasonableness of a document-label pair. We then introduce the Label-in-a-Haystack setting: the query and its label(s) are included in the demonstrations shown to LLMs, which are prompted to predict the label(s) again, while receiving task-specific instructions (e.g., emotion recognition) rather than label copying.We show how the failure to copy the label(s) to the output of the LLM are task-relevant and informative. Building on this, we propose the Label-in-a-Haystack Rectification (LiaHR) framework for subjective label correction: when the model outputs diverge from the reference gold labels, we assign the generated labels to the example instead of discarding it. This approach can be integrated into annotation pipelines to enhance signal-to-noise ratios. Comprehensive analyses, human evaluations, and ecological validity studies verify the utility of LiaHR for label correction. Code is available at https://github.com/gchochla/liahr.
Aggregation Artifacts in Subjective Tasks Collapse Large Language Models’ Posteriors
Georgios Chochlakis | Alexandros Potamianos | Kristina Lerman | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Georgios Chochlakis | Alexandros Potamianos | Kristina Lerman | Shrikanth Narayanan
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)
In-context Learning (ICL) has become the primary method for performing natural language tasks with Large Language Models (LLMs). The knowledge acquired during pre-training is crucial for this few-shot capability, providing the model with task priors. However, recent studies have shown that ICL predominantly relies on retrieving task priors rather than “learning” to perform tasks. This limitation is particularly evident in complex subjective domains such as emotion and morality, where priors significantly influence posterior predictions. In this work, we examine whether this is the result of the aggregation used in corresponding datasets, where trying to combine low-agreement, disparate annotations might lead to annotation artifacts that create detrimental noise in the prompt. Moreover, we evaluate the posterior bias towards certain annotators by grounding our study in appropriate, quantitative measures of LLM priors. Our results indicate that aggregation is a confounding factor in the modeling of subjective tasks, and advocate focusing on modeling individuals instead. However, aggregation does not explain the entire gap between ICL and the state of the art, meaning other factors in such tasks also account for the observed phenomena. Finally, by rigorously studying annotator-level labels, we find that it is possible for minority annotators to both better align with LLMs and have their perspectives further amplified.
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Co-authors
- Shrikanth Narayanan 3
- Kristina Lerman 2
- Marcus Ma 2
- Evans Alvarez 1
- Tikka Arjun Singh Bedi 1
- Kesley Cheng 1
- Aida Mostafazadeh Davani 1
- Morteza Dehghani 1
- Preni Golazizian 1
- Farzan Karimi-Malekabadi 1
- Nils Karl Reimer 1
- Brendan Kennedy 1
- Arta Khosravi 1
- Zhihe Li 1
- Christina Merrifield 1
- Ali Omrani 1
- Niyantha Maruthu Pandiyan 1
- Alexandros Potamianos 1
- Elnaz Rahmati 1
- Melissa Reyes 1
- Alireza S. Ziabari 1
- Jesse Thomason 1
- Jackson P. Trager 1
- Mellow Wei 1
- Peter Wu 1