Researcher profile

Yannick Assogba

Yannick Assogba contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Understanding Annotator Safety Policy with Interpretability

Safety policies define what constitutes safe and unsafe AI outputs, guiding data annotation and model development. However, annotation disagreement is pervasive and can stem from multiple sources such as operational failures (annotators misunderstand or misexecute the task), policy ambiguity (policy wording leaves room for interpretation), or value pluralism (different annotators hold different perspectives on safety). Distinguishing these sources matters. For example, operational failures call for quality control, ambiguity calls for policy clarification, and pluralism calls for deliberation about incorporating diverse perspectives. Yet understanding why annotators disagree is difficult. Directly asking annotators for their reasoning is costly, substantially increasing annotation burden, and can be unreliable for both human and LLM annotators as self-reported reasoning often fails to reflect actual decision processes. We introduce Annotator Policy Models (APMs), interpretable models that learn annotators' internal safety policies from labeling behavior alone, making annotator reasoning visible and comparable without additional annotation effort. We validate that APMs accurately model annotator safety policy (>80% accuracy), faithfully predict responses to counterfactual edits, and recover known policy differences in controlled settings. Applying APMs to LLM and human annotations, we demonstrate two core applications: (1) surfacing policy ambiguity by revealing how annotators interpret safety instructions differently, and (2) surfacing value pluralism by uncovering systematic differences in safety priorities across demographic groups. Together, these capabilities support more targeted, transparent, and inclusive safety policy design.

preprint2023arXiv

Large Scale Qualitative Evaluation of Generative Image Model Outputs

Evaluating generative image models remains a difficult problem. This is due to the high dimensionality of the outputs, the challenging task of representing but not replicating training data, and the lack of metrics that fully correspond to human perception and capture all the properties we want these models to exhibit. Therefore, qualitative evaluation of model outputs is an important part of model development and research publication practice. Quantitative evaluation is currently under-served by existing tools, which do not easily facilitate structured exploration of a large number of examples across the latent space of the model. To address this issue, we present Ravel, a visual analytics system that enables qualitative evaluation of model outputs on the order of hundreds of thousands of images. Ravel allows users to discover phenomena such as mode collapse, and find areas of training data that the model has failed to capture. It allows users to evaluate both quality and diversity of generated images in comparison to real images or to the output of another model that serves as a baseline. Our paper describes three case studies demonstrating the key insights made possible with Ravel, supported by a domain expert user study.