Temporal Simultaneity Predicts Annotation Quality in Sentiment Corpora
Mirrored from arXiv — NLP / Computation & Language for archival readability. Support the source by reading on the original site.
Computer Science > Computation and Language
Title:Temporal Simultaneity Predicts Annotation Quality in Sentiment Corpora
Abstract:Annotation quality is difficult to sustain when campaigns span weeks or months with small annotator pools. We present a Setswana sentiment dataset of 3,565 tweets annotated by three native-speaker annotators across eight batches and examine why inter-annotator agreement (IAA) declines over time. Despite an aggregate Randolph's free-marginal Kappa of $\kappa = 0.76$, "excellent," per-batch $\kappa$ falls by more than 32 points across the annotation task. Through six targeted analyses, we find that (i) label confusion concentrates on the negative/neutral boundary, (ii) two annotators show run-length drift consistent with autopilot labeling, and (iii) the dominant predictor of $\kappa$ is temporal simultaneity: tweets labeled within one minute achieve $\kappa = 0.98$, while those labeled more than a day apart reach only $\kappa = 0.65$. Annotation speed and tweet-level linguistic features show no meaningful association with $\kappa$. We benchmark three open multilingual encoders and proprietary models (GPT-5 and Gemini) on three-class sentiment classification; fine-tuning yields gains of 29 to 43 macro-F1 points over pretrained baselines, with GPT-5 few-shot leading overall (62.2 macro-F1). We release the dataset, per-annotation timestamps, and analysis code to support reproducible quality auditing for future African language NLP resources.
| Subjects: | Computation and Language (cs.CL) |
| Cite as: | arXiv:2605.27239 [cs.CL] |
| (or arXiv:2605.27239v1 [cs.CL] for this version) | |
| https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2605.27239
arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration)
|
Submission history
From: Idris Abdulmumin [view email][v1] Tue, 26 May 2026 16:21:20 UTC (9,222 KB)
Access Paper:
- View PDF
- TeX Source
References & Citations
Bibliographic and Citation Tools
Code, Data and Media Associated with this Article
Demos
Recommenders and Search Tools
arXivLabs: experimental projects with community collaborators
arXivLabs is a framework that allows collaborators to develop and share new arXiv features directly on our website.
Both individuals and organizations that work with arXivLabs have embraced and accepted our values of openness, community, excellence, and user data privacy. arXiv is committed to these values and only works with partners that adhere to them.
Have an idea for a project that will add value for arXiv's community? Learn more about arXivLabs.
More from arXiv — NLP / Computation & Language
-
Self-Verified Distillation: Your Language Model Is Secretly Its Own Synthetic Data Pipeline
May 27
-
Pretraining Data Exposure in Large Language Models: A Survey of Membership Inference, Data Contamination, and Security Implications
May 27
-
SPEAR: Code-Augmented Agentic Prompt Optimization
May 27
-
CroCo: Cross-Lingual Contrastive Preference Tuning on Self-Generations
May 27
Discussion (0)
Sign in to join the discussion. Free account, 30 seconds — email code or GitHub.
Sign in →No comments yet. Sign in and be the first to say something.