Shreya Havaldar

Orcid: 0000-0002-9661-5055

According to our database1, Shreya Havaldar authored at least 13 papers between 2020 and 2025.

Collaborative distances:
  • Dijkstra number2 of four.
  • Erdős number3 of four.

Timeline

2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
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2
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5
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Legend:

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In proceedings 
Article 
PhD thesis 
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Links

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2025
Entailed Between the Lines: Incorporating Implication into NLI.
CoRR, January, 2025

2024
The FIX Benchmark: Extracting Features Interpretable to eXperts.
CoRR, 2024

A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Social Norms in Bollywood and Hollywood Movies.
CoRR, 2024

Building Knowledge-Guided Lexica to Model Cultural Variation.
Proceedings of the 2024 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers), 2024

Evaluating Groups of Features via Consistency, Contiguity, and Stability.
Proceedings of the Second Tiny Papers Track at ICLR 2024, 2024

2023
Human-Centered Metrics for Dialog System Evaluation.
CoRR, 2023

A Cross-Modal Study of Pain Across Communities in the United States.
Proceedings of the Companion Proceedings of the ACM Web Conference 2023, 2023

Multilingual Language Models are not Multicultural: A Case Study in Emotion.
Proceedings of the 13th Workshop on Computational Approaches to Subjectivity, 2023

Faithful Chain-of-Thought Reasoning.
Proceedings of the 13th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing and the 3rd Conference of the Asia-Pacific Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2023

TopEx: Topic-based Explanations for Model Comparison.
Proceedings of the First Tiny Papers Track at ICLR 2023, 2023

Comparing Styles across Languages.
Proceedings of the 2023 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, 2023

2022
Introducing the Gab Hate Corpus: defining and applying hate-based rhetoric to social media posts at scale.
Lang. Resour. Evaluation, 2022

2020
Hatred is in the Eye of the Annotator: Hate Speech Classifiers Learn Human-Like Social Stereotypes.
Proceedings of the 42th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2020


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