/rturk

RTurk - A simple wrapper and library for Amazon's Mechanical Turk

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

RTurk - A ridiculously simple Mechanical Turk library in Ruby

What's it do?!?

RTurk is designed to fire off Mechanical Turk tasks for pages that reside on an external site.

The pages could be a part of a rails app, or just a simple javascript enabled form.

If you're integrating RTurk with a Rails app, do yourself a favor and check out Turkee by Jim Jones. It integrates your Rails forms with Mechanical Turk, and includes rake tasks to pull and process submissions. Definitely a time saver.

Installation

gem install rturk

Use

Let's say you have a form at "http://myapp.com/turkers/add_tags" where Turkers can add some tags to items in your catalogue.

Creating HIT's

require 'rturk'

RTurk.setup(YourAWSAccessKeyId, YourAWSAccessKey, :sandbox => true)
hit = RTurk::Hit.create(:title => "Add some tags to a photo") do |hit|
  hit.assignments = 2
  hit.description = 'blah'
  hit.question("http://myapp.com/turkers/add_tags",
               :frame_height => 1000)  # pixels for iframe
  hit.reward = 0.05
  hit.qualifications.add :approval_rate, { :gt => 80 }
end

p hit.url #=>  'https://workersandbox.mturk.com:443/mturk/preview?groupId=Q29J3XZQ1ASZH5YNKZDZ'

Reviewing and Approving hits HIT's

hits = RTurk::Hit.all_reviewable

puts "#{hits.size} reviewable hits. \n"

unless hits.empty?
  puts "Reviewing all assignments"

  hits.each do |hit|
    hit.assignments.each do |assignment|
      puts assignment.answers['tags']
      assignment.approve! if assignment.status == 'Submitted'
    end
  end
end

Wiping all your hits out

hits = RTurk::Hit.all_reviewable

puts "#{hits.size} reviewable hits. \n"

unless hits.empty?
  puts "Approving all assignments and disposing of each hit!"

  hits.each do |hit|
    hit.expire!
    hit.assignments.each do |assignment|
      assignment.approve!
    end
    hit.dispose!
  end
end

Logging

Want to see what's going on - enable logging.

RTurk::logger.level = Logger::DEBUG

Nitty Gritty

Here's a quick peak at what happens on the Mechanical Turk side.

A worker takes a look at your hit. The page will contain an iframe with your question URL loaded inside of it.

Amazon will append the AssignmentID parameter to the URL for your own information. In preview mode this will look like

http://myapp.com/turkers/add_tags?item_id=1234&AssignmentId=ASSIGNMENT_ID_NOT_AVAILABLE

If the Turker accepts the HIT, the page will reload and the iframe URL will resemble

http://myapp.com/turkers/add_tags?item_id=1234&AssignmentId=1234567890123456789ABC

The form in your page MUST CONTAIN the AssignmentID in a hidden input element. You could do this on the server side with a rails app, or on the client side with javascript(check the examples)

Anything submitted in this form will be sent to Amazon and saved for your review later.

More information

Take a look at the Amazon MTurk developer docs for more information. They have a complete list of API operations, all of which can be called with this library.

Contributors

Zach Hale
David Balatero
Rob Hanlon
Haris Amin
Tyler
David Dai