Fair Spatial Indexing: A paradigm for Group Spatial Fairness
Machine learning (ML) is playing an increasing role in decision-making tasks that directly affect individuals, e.g., loan approvals, or job applicant screening. Significant concerns arise that, without special provisions, individuals from under-privileged backgrounds may not get equitable access to...
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Zusammenfassung: | Machine learning (ML) is playing an increasing role in decision-making tasks
that directly affect individuals, e.g., loan approvals, or job applicant
screening. Significant concerns arise that, without special provisions,
individuals from under-privileged backgrounds may not get equitable access to
services and opportunities. Existing research studies fairness with respect to
protected attributes such as gender, race or income, but the impact of location
data on fairness has been largely overlooked. With the widespread adoption of
mobile apps, geospatial attributes are increasingly used in ML, and their
potential to introduce unfair bias is significant, given their high correlation
with protected attributes. We propose techniques to mitigate location bias in
machine learning. Specifically, we consider the issue of miscalibration when
dealing with geospatial attributes. We focus on spatial group fairness and we
propose a spatial indexing algorithm that accounts for fairness. Our KD-tree
inspired approach significantly improves fairness while maintaining high
learning accuracy, as shown by extensive experimental results on real data. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2302.02306 |