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Main Author: Ghosh, Sourojit
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.01590
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author Ghosh, Sourojit
author_facet Ghosh, Sourojit
contents The surge in the popularity of text-to-image generators (T2Is) has been matched by extensive research into ensuring fairness and equitable outcomes, with a focus on how they impact society. However, such work has typically focused on globally-experienced identities or centered Western contexts. In this paper, we address interpretations, representations, and stereotypes surrounding a tragically underexplored context in T2I research: caste. We examine how the T2I Stable Diffusion displays people of various castes, and what professions they are depicted as performing. Generating 100 images per prompt, we perform CLIP-cosine similarity comparisons with default depictions of an 'Indian person' by Stable Diffusion, and explore patterns of similarity. Our findings reveal how Stable Diffusion outputs perpetuate systems of 'castelessness', equating Indianness with high-castes and depicting caste-oppressed identities with markers of poverty. In particular, we note the stereotyping and representational harm towards the historically-marginalized Dalits, prominently depicted as living in rural areas and always at protests. Our findings underscore a need for a caste-aware approach towards T2I design, and we conclude with design recommendations.
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publishDate 2024
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spellingShingle Interpretations, Representations, and Stereotypes of Caste within Text-to-Image Generators
Ghosh, Sourojit
Computers and Society
The surge in the popularity of text-to-image generators (T2Is) has been matched by extensive research into ensuring fairness and equitable outcomes, with a focus on how they impact society. However, such work has typically focused on globally-experienced identities or centered Western contexts. In this paper, we address interpretations, representations, and stereotypes surrounding a tragically underexplored context in T2I research: caste. We examine how the T2I Stable Diffusion displays people of various castes, and what professions they are depicted as performing. Generating 100 images per prompt, we perform CLIP-cosine similarity comparisons with default depictions of an 'Indian person' by Stable Diffusion, and explore patterns of similarity. Our findings reveal how Stable Diffusion outputs perpetuate systems of 'castelessness', equating Indianness with high-castes and depicting caste-oppressed identities with markers of poverty. In particular, we note the stereotyping and representational harm towards the historically-marginalized Dalits, prominently depicted as living in rural areas and always at protests. Our findings underscore a need for a caste-aware approach towards T2I design, and we conclude with design recommendations.
title Interpretations, Representations, and Stereotypes of Caste within Text-to-Image Generators
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.01590