LGCYSINov 26, 2024

From Fairness to Infinity: Outcome-Indistinguishable (Omni)Prediction in Evolving Graphs

Harvard
arXiv:2411.17582v114 citationsh-index: 44
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses fairness and opportunity in hiring platforms by providing tools for structural change, though it builds incrementally on existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of predicting edge formation in evolving graphs, such as professional networks, to enable fair interventions, and presents online algorithms that achieve outcome indistinguishability and omniprediction with improved or complementary guarantees. It applies these techniques to obtain multicalibrated predictions for edge formation across demographic groups and optimize various social welfare functions.

Professional networks provide invaluable entree to opportunity through referrals and introductions. A rich literature shows they also serve to entrench and even exacerbate a status quo of privilege and disadvantage. Hiring platforms, equipped with the ability to nudge link formation, provide a tantalizing opening for beneficial structural change. We anticipate that key to this prospect will be the ability to estimate the likelihood of edge formation in an evolving graph. Outcome-indistinguishable prediction algorithms ensure that the modeled world is indistinguishable from the real world by a family of statistical tests. Omnipredictors ensure that predictions can be post-processed to yield loss minimization competitive with respect to a benchmark class of predictors for many losses simultaneously, with appropriate post-processing. We begin by observing that, by combining a slightly modified form of the online K29 star algorithm of Vovk (2007) with basic facts from the theory of reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces, one can derive simple and efficient online algorithms satisfying outcome indistinguishability and omniprediction, with guarantees that improve upon, or are complementary to, those currently known. This is of independent interest. We apply these techniques to evolving graphs, obtaining online outcome-indistinguishable omnipredictors for rich -- possibly infinite -- sets of distinguishers that capture properties of pairs of nodes, and their neighborhoods. This yields, inter alia, multicalibrated predictions of edge formation with respect to pairs of demographic groups, and the ability to simultaneously optimize loss as measured by a variety of social welfare functions.

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