Measuring Fairness in an Unfair World

J. Herington
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Computer scientists have made great strides in characterizing different measures of algorithmic fairness, and showing that certain measures of fairness cannot be jointly satisfied. In this paper, I argue that the three most popular families of measures - unconditional independence, target-conditional independence and classification-conditional independence - make assumptions that are unsustainable in the context of an unjust world. I begin by introducing the measures and the implicit idealizations they make about the underlying causal structure of the contexts in which they are deployed. I then discuss how these idealizations fall apart in the context of historical injustice, ongoing unmodeled oppression, and the permissibility of using sensitive attributes to rectify injustice. In the final section, I suggest an alternative framework for measuring fairness in the context of existing injustice: distributive fairness.
在一个不公平的世界中衡量公平
计算机科学家在描述算法公平性的不同度量方面取得了巨大的进步,并表明某些度量的公平性不能被共同满足。在本文中,我认为三种最流行的衡量标准——无条件独立性、目标-条件独立性和分类-条件独立性——在不公正的世界背景下做出的假设是不可持续的。首先,我将介绍这些衡量标准以及它们对所处环境的潜在因果结构所做的隐性理想化。然后,我讨论了这些理想化是如何在历史上的不公正、持续的未建模的压迫以及使用敏感属性纠正不公正的可能性的背景下瓦解的。在最后一节,我提出了在现有不公正的背景下衡量公平的另一种框架:分配公平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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