Visual Analysis of Discrimination in Machine Learning
Wang, Qianwen, Xu, Zhenhua, Chen, Zhutian, Wang, Yong, Liu, Shixia, Qu, Huamin
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
The growing use of automated decision-making in critical applications, such as crime prediction and college admission, has raised questions about fairness in machine learning. How can we decide whether different treatments are reasonable or discriminatory? In this paper, we investigate discrimination in machine learning from a visual analytics perspective and propose an interactive visualization tool, DiscriLens, to support a more comprehensive analysis. To reveal detailed information on algorithmic discrimination, DiscriLens identifies a collection of potentially discriminatory itemsets based on causal modeling and classification rules mining. By combining an extended Euler diagram with a matrix-based visualization, we develop a novel set visualization to facilitate the exploration and interpretation of discriminatory itemsets. A user study shows that users can interpret the visually encoded information in DiscriLens quickly and accurately. Use cases demonstrate that DiscriLens provides informative guidance in understanding and reducing algorithmic discrimination.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Feb-18-2023
- Country:
- North America
- United States
- New York (0.04)
- Nevada > Clark County
- Las Vegas (0.04)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- California
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.14)
- San Diego County > San Diego (0.04)
- Los Angeles County > Long Beach (0.04)
- Canada
- Quebec > Montreal (0.04)
- Nova Scotia > Halifax Regional Municipality
- Halifax (0.04)
- British Columbia > Metro Vancouver Regional District
- Vancouver (0.04)
- United States
- Europe
- Italy (0.04)
- France (0.04)
- United Kingdom
- Sweden > Stockholm
- Stockholm (0.04)
- Spain
- Catalonia > Barcelona Province
- Barcelona (0.04)
- Castilla-La Mancha > Albacete Province
- Albacete (0.04)
- Catalonia > Barcelona Province
- Asia > China
- Hong Kong (0.04)
- North America
- Genre:
- Questionnaire & Opinion Survey (1.00)
- Research Report
- New Finding (0.93)
- Experimental Study (0.93)
- Industry:
- Banking & Finance (0.93)
- Education > Educational Setting (0.34)
- Law
- Labor & Employment Law (0.46)
- Civil Rights & Constitutional Law (0.46)
- Technology: