# ๐Ÿ“– Annotation Guide: Health Literacy Welcome! Your task is to determine which pieces of information (subclaims) belong in different versions of a health text based on **Health Literacy levels**. ## * **Pre-selections:** Some boxes are checked by defaultโ€”these are the "minimum required" facts. ## Sometimes, generated summaries with different labels contain all the information present in the gold summary. ## In the case of full text, the amount of information included depends on the readability level. Texts with a low readability label contain less information than those with a proficient readability label. ## Consistency: Any information listed under 'Low' should automatically also appear under 'Intermediate' and 'Proficient. --- ### ๐ŸŸข Step 1: Identify the Source Check the top of the interface. You are working with either: * **Full Text:** The original clinical document. * **Gold Summary:** A condensed version of the facts. ### ๐Ÿ” Step 2: Review the Subclaims Subclaims are individual facts extracted from the text. > *Example: "The patient is 62 years old" or "The X-ray shows pneumonia."* --- ### โš–๏ธ Step 3: Annotate by Literacy Level You must select checkboxes for **three different audiences**. The goal is to create a "ladder" of information: | Level | Goal | Inclusion Strategy | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | **๐ŸŸข Low** | **Basic Survival** | Only the absolute essentials. What must they know to stay safe? | | **๐Ÿ”ต Intermediate** | **Clear Context** | Core info + helpful context. Explain the "what" and "why." | | **๐ŸŸฃ Proficient** | **Full Detail** | Everything. Include clinical findings, ages, and specific test data. | --- ### ๐Ÿ“Š Step 4: The Golden Rule (Check Your Percentages) To ensure high-quality data, your selections **must** follow this hierarchy: # **Low % < Intermediate % < Proficient %** โš ๏ธ **Wait for the Green Light:** If the **Low** level contains more information than **Intermediate**, the system will show a warning. Adjust your checkboxes until the percentages flow from lowest to highest. --- ### ๐Ÿ’ก Quick Tips * **Clinical Relevance:** For **Proficient**, include specific numbers (e.g., "140/90 mmHg") that might be too technical for **Low**. **Ready to start?** Scroll down to begin your first annotation.