Culture Affordance Atlas: Reconciling Object Diversity Through Functional Mapping
Nwatu, Joan, Bai, Longju, Ignat, Oana, Mihalcea, Rada
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Culture shapes the objects people use and for what purposes, yet mainstream Vision-Language (VL) datasets frequently exhibit cultural biases, disproportionately favoring higher-income, Western contexts. This imbalance reduces model generalizability and perpetuates performance disparities, especially impacting lower-income and non-Western communities. To address these disparities, we propose a novel function-centric framework that categorizes objects by the functions they fulfill, across diverse cultural and economic contexts. We implement this framework by creating the Culture Affordance Atlas, a re-annotated and culturally grounded restructuring of the Dollar Street dataset spanning 46 functions and 288 objects publicly available at https://lit.eecs.umich.edu/CultureAffordance-Atlas/index.html. Through extensive empirical analyses using the CLIP model, we demonstrate that function-centric labels substantially reduce socioeconomic performance gaps between high- and low-income groups by a median of 6 pp (statistically significant), improving model effectiveness for lower-income contexts. Furthermore, our analyses reveals numerous culturally essential objects that are frequently overlooked in prominent VL datasets. Our contributions offer a scalable pathway toward building inclusive VL datasets and equitable AI systems.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Dec-4-2025
- Country:
- Africa
- Asia
- Europe
- North America
- Canada (0.04)
- Central America (0.04)
- United States
- Michigan > Washtenaw County
- Ann Arbor (0.04)
- New Mexico > Bernalillo County
- Albuquerque (0.04)
- Michigan > Washtenaw County
- South America (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.46)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine (0.47)
- Technology: