Distribution-Specific Auditing For Subgroup Fairness
We study the problem of auditing classifiers with the notion of statistical subgroup fairness. Kearns et al. (2018) has shown that the problem of auditing combinatorial subgroups fairness is as hard as agnostic learning. Essentially all work on remedying statistical measures of discrimination agains...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study the problem of auditing classifiers with the notion of statistical
subgroup fairness. Kearns et al. (2018) has shown that the problem of auditing
combinatorial subgroups fairness is as hard as agnostic learning. Essentially
all work on remedying statistical measures of discrimination against subgroups
assumes access to an oracle for this problem, despite the fact that no
efficient algorithms are known for it. If we assume the data distribution is
Gaussian, or even merely log-concave, then a recent line of work has discovered
efficient agnostic learning algorithms for halfspaces. Unfortunately, the
reduction of Kearns et al. was formulated in terms of weak, "distribution-free"
learning, and thus did not establish a connection for families such as
log-concave distributions.
In this work, we give positive and negative results on auditing for Gaussian
distributions: On the positive side, we present an alternative approach to
leverage these advances in agnostic learning and thereby obtain the first
polynomial-time approximation scheme (PTAS) for auditing nontrivial
combinatorial subgroup fairness: we show how to audit statistical notions of
fairness over homogeneous halfspace subgroups when the features are Gaussian.
On the negative side, we find that under cryptographic assumptions, no
polynomial-time algorithm can guarantee any nontrivial auditing, even under
Gaussian feature distributions, for general halfspace subgroups. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2401.16439 |