The University of Texas at Arlington (UTA)
Informed Consent for Studies with Adults
Data Annotation for Claim-Matching
Chengkai Li
Professor and Associate Chair
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
(817) 272-0162
cli@uta.edu
Theodora Toutountzi
Ph.D. Candidate Student
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
theodora.toutountzi@mavs.uta.edu
The research team above is conducting a research study that aims to collect annotated data (often called labeled data in the field of artificial intelligence and machine learning) that would be used to train a machine learning model for measuring how helpful an existing fact-check is in vetting a factual claim that was not fact-checked before. Specifically, you will be provided with pairs of sentences to annotate. Each pair consists of a fact-check published by fact-checking outlets such as PolitiFact, FactCheck.org, Washington Post Fact Checker, and Snopes and an unchecked claim derived from political debates, speeches, interviews, etc. For each pair, you will be asked to decide how helpful the fact-check is in vetting the unchecked political claim. You will continue this same process for as many available pairs as you wish.
For that, you choose one of the five options: Not at all helpful, Slightly helpful, Somewhat helpful, Very helpful, and Extremely helpful. The machine learning model can become useful in automating fact-checking. Imagine an audience of a presidential debate. When a presidential candidate repeats a factual statement that has been marked as false by professional fact-checkers, the machine learning model can help identify previous relevant fact-checks and present them to the audience. This can help mitigate the spreading of misinformation, which is a fundamental threat to the modern society.
You can choose to participate in this research study if you are over the age of 18 and fluent in English. Please note that you are not eligible for this study if you are not an English fluent speaker or are younger than 18.
You might want to participate in this study if you would like to get a taste of how technology might help vet factual statements and familiarize yourself with the fact-checking process. However, you might not want to participate in this study if you do not have the time or are not interested in the fact-checking process.
This study has been reviewed and approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB). An IRB is an ethics committee that reviews research with the goal of protecting the rights and welfare of human research subjects. Your most important right as a human subject is informed consent. You should take your time to consider the information provided by this form and the research team and ask questions about anything you do not fully understand before making your decision about participating.
If you decide to participate in this study, you should know that you have the full freedom to decide the duration of your participation, from a couple of minutes to as long as you prefer, for as many times as you want until the end of the study.
If you decide to participate in this research study, this is the list of activities that we will ask you to perform as part of the research:
You will get a taste of how technology might help vet factual statements. Furthermore, the research outcome might lead to advancement in data-driven fact-checking, which tackles an important sciential challenge.
This research study is not expected to pose any additional risks beyond what you would normally experience in your regular everyday life. However, if you experience discomfort, please inform the research team, and quit the study without any consequence to you.
To minimize the risk of your personal information being exposed, we are storing your personal data on UTA servers, limiting its access to the research team only.
Your decision to participate or not participate will not influence your grades or future research opportunities in any way.
You will not be compensated for your participation.
There are no alternative procedures offered for this study. However, you can elect not to participate in the study or quit at any time at no consequence.
The research team is committed to protecting your rights and privacy as a research participant. All paper and electronic data collected from this study will be stored in a secure location on the UTA campus and/or a secure UTA server for at least three (3) years after the end of this research.
The results of this study may be published and/or presented without naming you as a participant. The data collected about you for this study may be used for future research studies that are not described in this consent form. If that occurs, an IRB would first evaluate the use of any information that is identifiable to you, and confidentiality protection would be maintained.
While absolute confidentiality cannot be guaranteed, the research team will make every effort to protect the confidentiality of your records as described here and to the extent permitted by law. In addition to the research team, the following entities may have access to your records, but only on a need-to-know basis: the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the FDA (federal regulating agencies), the reviewing IRB, and sponsors of the study.
Questions about this research study may be directed to Dr. Chengkai Li at (817) 272-0162 or cli@uta.edu and Theodora Toutountzi at theodora.toutountzi@mavs.uta.edu. Any questions you may have about your rights as a research subject or complaints about the research may be directed to the Office of Research Administration; Regulatory Services at 817-272-3723 or regulatoryservices@uta.edu.
By clicking “Accept”, you are confirming that you understand the study’s purpose, procedures, potential risks, and your rights as a research subject. By agreeing to participate, you are not waiving any of your legal rights. You can refuse to participate or discontinue participation at any time, with no penalty or loss of benefits that you would ordinarily have. Please click “Accept” if you are at least 18 years of age and voluntarily agree to participate in this study.