GTAIAug 21, 2020

Algorithmic Transparency with Strategic Users

arXiv:2008.09283v137 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the strategic implications of algorithmic transparency for firms and users in decision-making contexts, offering novel insights into when transparency is advantageous.

The paper tackles the problem of whether firms should make their machine learning algorithms transparent to users, given concerns about gaming, and finds that transparency can benefit firms by improving predictive power and motivating user investment in desirable features.

Should firms that apply machine learning algorithms in their decision-making make their algorithms transparent to the users they affect? Despite growing calls for algorithmic transparency, most firms have kept their algorithms opaque, citing potential gaming by users that may negatively affect the algorithm's predictive power. We develop an analytical model to compare firm and user surplus with and without algorithmic transparency in the presence of strategic users and present novel insights. We identify a broad set of conditions under which making the algorithm transparent benefits the firm. We show that, in some cases, even the predictive power of machine learning algorithms may increase if the firm makes them transparent. By contrast, users may not always be better off under algorithmic transparency. The results hold even when the predictive power of the opaque algorithm comes largely from correlational features and the cost for users to improve on them is close to zero. Overall, our results show that firms should not view manipulation by users as bad. Rather, they should use algorithmic transparency as a lever to motivate users to invest in more desirable features.

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