@inproceedings{zhou-etal-2025-culture,
title = "Culture is Not Trivia: Sociocultural Theory for Cultural {NLP}",
author = "Zhou, Naitian and
Bamman, David and
Bleaman, Isaac L.",
editor = "Che, Wanxiang and
Nabende, Joyce and
Shutova, Ekaterina and
Pilehvar, Mohammad Taher",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)",
month = jul,
year = "2025",
address = "Vienna, Austria",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingestion-acl-25/2025.acl-long.1256/",
pages = "25869--25886",
ISBN = "979-8-89176-251-0",
abstract = "The field of cultural NLP has recently experienced rapid growth, driven by a pressing need to ensure that language technologies are effective and safe across a pluralistic user base. This work has largely progressed without a shared conception of culture, instead choosing to rely on a wide array of cultural proxies. However, this leads to a number of recurring limitations: coarse national boundaries fail to capture nuanced differences that lay within them, limited coverage restricts datasets to only a subset of usually highly-represented cultures, and a lack of dynamicity results in static cultural benchmarks that do not change as culture evolves. In this position paper, we argue that these methodological limitations are symptomatic of a theoretical gap. We draw on a well-developed theory of culture from sociocultural linguistics to fill this gap by 1) demonstrating in a case study how it can clarify methodological constraints and affordances, 2) offering theoretically-motivated paths forward to achieving cultural competence, and 3) arguing that localization is a more useful framing for the goals of much current work in cultural NLP."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Culture is Not Trivia: Sociocultural Theory for Cultural NLP](https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingestion-acl-25/2025.acl-long.1256/) (Zhou et al., ACL 2025)
ACL
- Naitian Zhou, David Bamman, and Isaac L. Bleaman. 2025. Culture is Not Trivia: Sociocultural Theory for Cultural NLP. In Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers), pages 25869–25886, Vienna, Austria. Association for Computational Linguistics.