Human and LLM Biases in Hate Speech Annotations: A Socio-Demographic Analysis of Annotators and Targets

Authors

  • Tommaso Giorgi University of Pisa, Italy
  • Lorenzo Cima University of Pisa, Italy IIT-CNR, Pisa, Italy
  • Tiziano Fagni IIT-CNR, Pisa, Italy
  • Marco Avvenuti University of Pisa, Italy
  • Stefano Cresci IIT-CNR, Pisa, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v19i1.35837

Abstract

The rise of online platforms exacerbated the spread of hate speech, demanding scalable and effective detection. However, the accuracy of hate speech detection systems heavily relies on human-labeled data, which is inherently susceptible to biases. While previous work has examined the issue, the interplay between the characteristics of the annotator and those of the target of the hate are still unexplored. We fill this gap by leveraging an extensive dataset with rich socio-demographic information of both annotators and targets, uncovering how human biases manifest in relation to the target's attributes. Our analysis surfaces the presence of widespread biases, which we quantitatively describe and characterize based on their intensity and prevalence, revealing marked differences. Furthermore, we compare human biases with those exhibited by persona-based LLMs. Our findings indicate that while persona-based LLMs do exhibit biases, these differ significantly from those of human annotators. Overall, our work offers new and nuanced results on human biases in hate speech annotations, as well as fresh insights into the design of AI-driven hate speech detection systems.

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Published

2025-06-07

How to Cite

Giorgi, T., Cima, L., Fagni, T., Avvenuti, M., & Cresci, S. (2025). Human and LLM Biases in Hate Speech Annotations: A Socio-Demographic Analysis of Annotators and Targets. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 19(1), 653–670. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v19i1.35837