Review of Mathematical frameworks for Fairness in Machine Learning

del Barrio, Eustasio, Gordaliza, Paula, Loubes, Jean-Michel

arXiv.org Machine Learning 

With both the introduction of new ways of storing, sharing and streaming data and the drastic development of the capacity of computers to handle large computations, the conception of models have changed. Mathematical models were first designed following prior ideas or conjectures from physical or biological models, then tested by designing experiments to test the validity of the ideas of their inventors. The model holds until new observations enable to reject its assumptions. The so-called Big Data's area introduced a new paradigm. The observed data convey enough information to understand the complexity of real life and the more the data, the better the description of the reality. Hence building models optimised to fit the data has become an efficient way to obtain generalizable models able to describe and forecast the real world. In this framework, the principle of supervised machine learning is to build a decision rule from a set of labeled examples called the learning sample, that fits the data.

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