3.8 Proceedings Paper

From Soft Classifiers to Hard Decisions: How fair can we be?

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3287560.3287561

Keywords

algorithmic fairness; classification; post-processing

Funding

  1. NSF [1413920, 1801564, CNS-1413920, CCF-1617730, CCF-1650733, CCF-1665252, DMS-1737944, 1414119, IIS-1447700, AF-1763786]
  2. ISF [1523/14]
  3. 2018 Facebook Fellowship
  4. MIT RSA Professorship
  5. MIT Fintech Initiative
  6. ONR [N00014-12-1-0999]
  7. Clare Boothe Luce Graduate Research Fellowship
  8. Sloan Foundation Research Award
  9. Division Of Computer and Network Systems
  10. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1413920] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A popular methodology for building binary decision-making classifiers in the presence of imperfect information is to first construct a calibrated non-binary scoring classifier, and then to post-process this score to obtain a binary decision. We study various fairness (or, error-balance) properties of this methodology, when the non-binary scores are calibrated over all protected groups, and with a variety of post-processing algorithms. Specifically, we show: First, there does not exist a general way to post-process a calibrated classifier to equalize protected groups' positive or negative predictive value (PPV or NPV). For certain nice calibrated classifiers, either PPV or NPV can be equalized when the post processor uses different thresholds across protected groups. Still, when the post-processing consists of a single global threshold across all groups, natural fairness properties, such as equalizing PPV in a nontrivial way, do not hold even for nice classifiers. Second, when the post-processing stage is allowed to defer on some decisions (that is, to avoid making a decision by handing off some examples to a separate process), then for the non-deferred decisions, the resulting classifier can be made to equalize PPV, NPV, false positive rate (FPR) and false negative rate (FNR) across the protected groups. This suggests a way to partially evade the impossibility results of Chouldechova and Kleinberg et al., which preclude equalizing all of these measures simultaneously. We also present different deferring strategies and show how they affect the fairness properties of the overall system. We evaluate our post-processing techniques using the COMPAS data set from 2016.

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