IRDBMar 25, 2021

Fairness in Ranking: A Survey

arXiv:2103.14000v3103 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses fairness issues in ranking systems for researchers and practitioners, but is incremental as it synthesizes existing work rather than introducing new methods.

This survey systematically reviews fairness requirements in algorithmic ranking, offering a broad perspective that connects formalizations and approaches across data management, algorithms, information retrieval, and recommender systems, while developing a common narrative around value frameworks and presenting classification frameworks, technical methods, and evaluation recommendations.

In the past few years, there has been much work on incorporating fairness requirements into algorithmic rankers, with contributions coming from the data management, algorithms, information retrieval, and recommender systems communities. In this survey we give a systematic overview of this work, offering a broad perspective that connects formalizations and algorithmic approaches across subfields. An important contribution of our work is in developing a common narrative around the value frameworks that motivate specific fairness-enhancing interventions in ranking. This allows us to unify the presentation of mitigation objectives and of algorithmic techniques to help meet those objectives or identify trade-offs. In this survey, we describe four classification frameworks for fairness-enhancing interventions, along which we relate the technical methods surveyed in this paper, discuss evaluation datasets, and present technical work on fairness in score-based ranking. Then, we present methods that incorporate fairness in supervised learning, and also give representative examples of recent work on fairness in recommendation and matchmaking systems. We also discuss evaluation frameworks for fair score-based ranking and fair learning-to-rank, and draw a set of recommendations for the evaluation of fair ranking methods.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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