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Main Authors: Saxena, Nripsuta Ani, Horn, Abigail L., Zhang, Wenbin, Shahabi, Cyrus
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.14040
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author Saxena, Nripsuta Ani
Horn, Abigail L.
Zhang, Wenbin
Shahabi, Cyrus
author_facet Saxena, Nripsuta Ani
Horn, Abigail L.
Zhang, Wenbin
Shahabi, Cyrus
contents Despite location being increasingly used in decision-making systems deployed in sensitive domains such as mortgages and insurance, little attention has been paid to the unfairness that may seep in due to the correlation of location with characteristics considered protected under anti-discrimination law, such as race or national origin. This position paper argues for the urgent need to consider fairness with respect to location, termed $\textit{spatial fairness}$. It outlines the harms perpetuated through location's correlation with protected characteristics, which may be particularly consequential due to its treatment as a neutral or purely technical attribute, abstracted from its historical, political, and socioeconomic context. This interdisciplinary work connects knowledge from fields such as public policy, economic development, and geography to highlight how existing fair-AI research falls short in addressing spatial biases, and fails to consider challenges unique to spatial data. Furthermore, we identify limitations in the small body of prior work on spatial fairness work, and propose guidelines to inform future research aimed at mitigating spatial biases in data-driven decision-making systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_14040
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Spatial Fairness: The Case for its Importance, Limitations of Existing Work, and Guidelines for Future Research
Saxena, Nripsuta Ani
Horn, Abigail L.
Zhang, Wenbin
Shahabi, Cyrus
Computers and Society
Despite location being increasingly used in decision-making systems deployed in sensitive domains such as mortgages and insurance, little attention has been paid to the unfairness that may seep in due to the correlation of location with characteristics considered protected under anti-discrimination law, such as race or national origin. This position paper argues for the urgent need to consider fairness with respect to location, termed $\textit{spatial fairness}$. It outlines the harms perpetuated through location's correlation with protected characteristics, which may be particularly consequential due to its treatment as a neutral or purely technical attribute, abstracted from its historical, political, and socioeconomic context. This interdisciplinary work connects knowledge from fields such as public policy, economic development, and geography to highlight how existing fair-AI research falls short in addressing spatial biases, and fails to consider challenges unique to spatial data. Furthermore, we identify limitations in the small body of prior work on spatial fairness work, and propose guidelines to inform future research aimed at mitigating spatial biases in data-driven decision-making systems.
title Spatial Fairness: The Case for its Importance, Limitations of Existing Work, and Guidelines for Future Research
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.14040