Episode #41 - Binns on Fairness in Algorithmic Decision-Making
Philosophical Disquisitions - A podcast by John Danaher
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In this episode I talk to Reuben Binns. Reuben is a post-doctoral researcher at the Department of Computer Science in Oxford University. His research focuses on both the technical, ethical and legal aspects of privacy, machine learning and algorithmic decision-making. We have a detailed and informative discussion (for me at any rate!) about recent debates about algorithmic bias and discrimination, and how they could be informed by the philosophy of egalitarianism. You can download the episode here or listen below. You can also subscribe on Stitcher and iTunes (the RSS feed is here). Show notes0:00 - Introduction 1:46 - What is algorithmic decision-making? 4:20 - Isn't all decision-making algorithmic? 6:10 - Examples of unfairness in algorithmic decision-making: The COMPAS debate 12:02 - Limitations of the COMPAS debate 15:22 - Other examples of unfairness in algorithmic decision-making 17:00 - What is discrimination in decision-making? 19:45 - The mental state theory of discrimination 25:20 - Statistical discrimination and the problem of generalisation 29:10 - Defending algorithmic decision-making from the charge of statistical discrimination 34:40 - Algorithmic typecasting: Could we all end up like William Shatner? 39:02 - Egalitarianism and algorithmic decision-making 43:07 - The role that luck and desert play in our understanding of fairness 49:38 - Deontic justice and historical discrimination in algorithmic decision-making 53:36 - Fair distribution vs Fair recognition 59:03 - Should we be enthusiastic about the fairness of future algorithmic decision-making? Relevant LinksReuben's homepage Reuben's institutional page 'Fairness in Machine Learning: Lessons from Political Philosophy' by Reuben Binns 'Algorithmic Accountability and Public Reason' by Reuben Binns 'It's Reducing a Human Being to a Percentage: Perceptions of Justice in Algorithmic Decision-Making' by Binns et al 'Machine Bias' - the ProPublica story on unfairness in the COMPAS recidivism algorithm 'Inherent Tradeoffs in the Fair Determination of Risk Scores' by Kleinberg et al -- an impossibility proof showing that you cannot minimise false positive rates and equalise accuracy rates across two populations at the same time (except in the rare case that the base rate for both populations is the same) #mc_embed_signup{background:#fff; clear:left; font:14px Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; } /* Add your own MailChimp form style overrides in your site stylesheet or in this style block. We recommend moving this block and the preceding CSS link to the HEAD of your HTML file. */ Subscribe to the newsletter