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Autori principali: Kelly, Markelle, Tahaei, Mohammad, Smyth, Padhraic, Wilcox, Lauren
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.05390
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author Kelly, Markelle
Tahaei, Mohammad
Smyth, Padhraic
Wilcox, Lauren
author_facet Kelly, Markelle
Tahaei, Mohammad
Smyth, Padhraic
Wilcox, Lauren
contents While gender bias in large language models (LLMs) has been extensively studied in many domains, uses of LLMs in e-commerce remain largely unexamined and may reveal novel forms of algorithmic bias and harm. Our work investigates this space, developing data-driven taxonomic categories of gender bias in the context of product description generation, which we situate with respect to existing general purpose harms taxonomies. We illustrate how AI-generated product descriptions can uniquely surface gender biases in ways that require specialized detection and mitigation approaches. Further, we quantitatively analyze issues corresponding to our taxonomic categories in two models used for this task -- GPT-3.5 and an e-commerce-specific LLM -- demonstrating that these forms of bias commonly occur in practice. Our results illuminate unique, under-explored dimensions of gender bias, such as assumptions about clothing size, stereotypical bias in which features of a product are advertised, and differences in the use of persuasive language. These insights contribute to our understanding of three types of AI harms identified by current frameworks: exclusionary norms, stereotyping, and performance disparities, particularly for the context of e-commerce.
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spellingShingle Understanding Gender Bias in AI-Generated Product Descriptions
Kelly, Markelle
Tahaei, Mohammad
Smyth, Padhraic
Wilcox, Lauren
Computation and Language
Machine Learning
While gender bias in large language models (LLMs) has been extensively studied in many domains, uses of LLMs in e-commerce remain largely unexamined and may reveal novel forms of algorithmic bias and harm. Our work investigates this space, developing data-driven taxonomic categories of gender bias in the context of product description generation, which we situate with respect to existing general purpose harms taxonomies. We illustrate how AI-generated product descriptions can uniquely surface gender biases in ways that require specialized detection and mitigation approaches. Further, we quantitatively analyze issues corresponding to our taxonomic categories in two models used for this task -- GPT-3.5 and an e-commerce-specific LLM -- demonstrating that these forms of bias commonly occur in practice. Our results illuminate unique, under-explored dimensions of gender bias, such as assumptions about clothing size, stereotypical bias in which features of a product are advertised, and differences in the use of persuasive language. These insights contribute to our understanding of three types of AI harms identified by current frameworks: exclusionary norms, stereotyping, and performance disparities, particularly for the context of e-commerce.
title Understanding Gender Bias in AI-Generated Product Descriptions
topic Computation and Language
Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.05390