Trustworthy Social Bias Measurement
Bommasani, Rishi, Liang, Percy
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
How do we design measures of social bias that we trust? While prior work has introduced several measures, no measure has gained widespread trust: instead, mounting evidence argues we should distrust these measures. In this work, we design bias measures that warrant trust based on the cross-disciplinary theory of measurement modeling. To combat the frequently fuzzy treatment of social bias in NLP, we explicitly define social bias, grounded in principles drawn from social science research. We operationalize our definition by proposing a general bias measurement framework DivDist, which we use to instantiate 5 concrete bias measures. To validate our measures, we propose a rigorous testing protocol with 8 testing criteria (e.g. predictive validity: do measures predict biases in US employment?). Through our testing, we demonstrate considerable evidence to trust our measures, showing they overcome conceptual, technical, and empirical deficiencies present in prior measures.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Dec-20-2022
- Country:
- Africa > Eswatini
- Asia
- Europe
- Belgium > Brussels-Capital Region
- Brussels (0.04)
- Denmark > Capital Region
- Copenhagen (0.04)
- Germany > Berlin (0.04)
- Ireland > Leinster
- County Dublin > Dublin (0.04)
- Italy > Tuscany
- Florence (0.04)
- Spain > Valencian Community
- Valencia Province > Valencia (0.04)
- United Kingdom > England (0.04)
- Belgium > Brussels-Capital Region
- North America
- Canada > British Columbia
- Dominican Republic (0.04)
- United States
- California > Santa Clara County
- Palo Alto (0.04)
- Illinois > Cook County
- Chicago (0.04)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- Massachusetts > Hampshire County
- Amherst (0.04)
- Minnesota > Hennepin County
- Minneapolis (0.14)
- New Mexico > Santa Fe County
- Santa Fe (0.04)
- New York > New York County
- New York City (0.04)
- Washington > King County
- Seattle (0.04)
- California > Santa Clara County
- Oceania > Australia
- Tasmania (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.46)
- Industry:
- Government (0.93)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Neurology (0.46)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Sports (0.67)
- Media (1.00)
- Technology: