LGCRNov 23, 2023

Privacy-Preserving Algorithmic Recourse

arXiv:2311.14137v110 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy concerns for individuals seeking recourse from ML decisions, though it is incremental by building on existing counterfactual explanation methods.

The paper tackles the problem of privacy risks in generating realistic recourse paths for individuals affected by adverse ML model outcomes, and presents PrivRecourse, a pipeline that uses differentially private clustering to create private and realistic paths, with empirical validation on finance datasets.

When individuals are subject to adverse outcomes from machine learning models, providing a recourse path to help achieve a positive outcome is desirable. Recent work has shown that counterfactual explanations - which can be used as a means of single-step recourse - are vulnerable to privacy issues, putting an individuals' privacy at risk. Providing a sequential multi-step path for recourse can amplify this risk. Furthermore, simply adding noise to recourse paths found from existing methods can impact the realism and actionability of the path for an end-user. In this work, we address privacy issues when generating realistic recourse paths based on instance-based counterfactual explanations, and provide PrivRecourse: an end-to-end privacy preserving pipeline that can provide realistic recourse paths. PrivRecourse uses differentially private (DP) clustering to represent non-overlapping subsets of the private dataset. These DP cluster centers are then used to generate recourse paths by forming a graph with cluster centers as the nodes, so that we can generate realistic - feasible and actionable - recourse paths. We empirically evaluate our approach on finance datasets and compare it to simply adding noise to data instances, and to using DP synthetic data, to generate the graph. We observe that PrivRecourse can provide paths that are private and realistic.

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