Jenny Björklund


2024

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We Don’t Talk About That: Case Studies on Intersectional Analysis of Social Bias in Large Language Models
Hannah Devinney | Jenny Björklund | Henrik Björklund
Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on Gender Bias in Natural Language Processing (GeBNLP)

Despite concerns that Large Language Models (LLMs) are vectors for reproducing and amplifying social biases such as sexism, transphobia, islamophobia, and racism, there is a lack of work qualitatively analyzing how such patterns of bias are generated by LLMs. We use mixed-methods approaches and apply a feminist, intersectional lens to the problem across two language domains, Swedish and English, by generating narrative texts using LLMs. We find that hegemonic norms are consistently reproduced; dominant identities are often treated as ‘default’; and discussion of identity itself may be considered ‘inappropriate’ by the safety features applied to some LLMs. Due to the differing behaviors of models, depending both on their design and the language they are trained on, we observe that strategies of identifying “bias” must be adapted to individual models and their socio-cultural contexts._Content warning: This research concerns the identification of harms, including stereotyping, denigration, and erasure of minoritized groups. Examples, including transphobic and racist content, are included and discussed._

2020

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Semi-Supervised Topic Modeling for Gender Bias Discovery in English and Swedish
Hannah Devinney | Jenny Björklund | Henrik Björklund
Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Gender Bias in Natural Language Processing

Gender bias has been identified in many models for Natural Language Processing, stemming from implicit biases in the text corpora used to train the models. Such corpora are too large to closely analyze for biased or stereotypical content. Thus, we argue for a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, where the quantitative part produces a view of the data of a size suitable for qualitative analysis. We investigate the usefulness of semi-supervised topic modeling for the detection and analysis of gender bias in three corpora (mainstream news articles in English and Swedish, and LGBTQ+ web content in English). We compare differences in topic models for three gender categories (masculine, feminine, and nonbinary or neutral) in each corpus. We find that in all corpora, genders are treated differently and that these differences tend to correspond to hegemonic ideas of gender.