Yann Henon

2papers

2 Papers

CVMar 16, 2021Code
Balancing Biases and Preserving Privacy on Balanced Faces in the Wild

Joseph P Robinson, Can Qin, Yann Henon et al.

There are demographic biases present in current facial recognition (FR) models. To measure these biases across different ethnic and gender subgroups, we introduce our Balanced Faces in the Wild (BFW) dataset. This dataset allows for the characterization of FR performance per subgroup. We found that relying on a single score threshold to differentiate between genuine and imposters sample pairs leads to suboptimal results. Additionally, performance within subgroups often varies significantly from the global average. Therefore, specific error rates only hold for populations that match the validation data. To mitigate imbalanced performances, we propose a novel domain adaptation learning scheme that uses facial features extracted from state-of-the-art neural networks. This scheme boosts the average performance and preserves identity information while removing demographic knowledge. Removing demographic knowledge prevents potential biases from affecting decision-making and protects privacy by eliminating demographic information. We explore the proposed method and demonstrate that subgroup classifiers can no longer learn from features projected using our domain adaptation scheme. For access to the source code and data, please visit https://github.com/visionjo/facerec-bias-bfw.

CVFeb 16, 2020Code
Face Recognition: Too Bias, or Not Too Bias?

Joseph P Robinson, Gennady Livitz, Yann Henon et al.

We reveal critical insights into problems of bias in state-of-the-art facial recognition (FR) systems using a novel Balanced Faces In the Wild (BFW) dataset: data balanced for gender and ethnic groups. We show variations in the optimal scoring threshold for face-pairs across different subgroups. Thus, the conventional approach of learning a global threshold for all pairs resulting in performance gaps among subgroups. By learning subgroup-specific thresholds, we not only mitigate problems in performance gaps but also show a notable boost in the overall performance. Furthermore, we do a human evaluation to measure the bias in humans, which supports the hypothesis that such a bias exists in human perception. For the BFW database, source code, and more, visit github.com/visionjo/facerec-bias-bfw.