mlr3fairness

Machine Learning Fairness Extension for mlr3.

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Installation

Install the development version from github:

remotes::install_github("mlr-org/mlr3fairness")

Why should I care about fairness in machine learning?

Machine Learning model predictions can be skewed by a range of factors and thus might be considered unfair towards certain groups or individuals. An example would be the COMPAS algorithm, which is a popular commercial algorithm used by judges and parole officers for scoring criminal defendant’s likelihood of reoffending (recidivism). Studies have shown, that the algorithm might be biased in favor of white defendants. Biases can occur in a large variety of situations where algorithms automate or support human decision making e.g. credit checks, automatic HR tools along with a variety of other domains.

The goal of mlr3fairness is to allow for auditing of mlr3 learners, visualization and subsequently trying to improve fairness using debiasing strategies.


:warning: Note Bias auditing and debiasing solely based on observational data can not guarantee fairness of a decision making system. Several biases, for example comming from the data can not be detected using the approaches implemented in mlr3fairness. The goal of this software is instead to allow for a better understanding and first hints at possible fairness problems in a studied model.


Feature Overview

More Information

Protected Attribute

mlr3fairness requires information about the protected attribute wrt. which we want to assess fairness. This can be set via the col_role “pta” (protected attribute).

task$col_roles$pta = "variable_name"

In case a non-categorical or more complex protected attribute is required, it can be manually computed and added to the task. mlr3fairness does not require specific types for pta, but will compute one metric for every unique value in the pta column.

Fairness Metrics

mlr3fairness offers a variety of fairness metrics. Metrics are prefixed with fairness. and can be found in the msr() dictionary. Most fairness metrics are based on a difference between two protected groups (e.g. male and female) for a given metric (e.g. the false positive rate: fpr). See the vignette for a more in-depth introduction to fairness metrics and how to choose them.

library(mlr3)
library(mlr3fairness)
key description
fairness.acc Absolute differences in accuracy across groups
fairness.mse Absolute differences in mean squared error across groups
fairness.fnr Absolute differences in false negative rates across groups
fairness.fpr Absolute differences in false positive rates across groups
fairness.tnr Absolute differences in true negative rates across groups
fairness.tpr Absolute differences in true positive rates across groups
fairness.npv Absolute differences in negative predictive values across groups
fairness.ppv Absolute differences in positive predictive values across groups
fairness.fomr Absolute differences in false omission rates across groups
fairness.fp Absolute differences in false positives across groups
fairness.tp Absolute differences in true positives across groups
fairness.tn Absolute differences in true negatives across groups
fairness.fn Absolute differences in false negatives across groups
fairness.cv Difference in positive class prediction, also known as Calders-Wevers gap or demographic parity
fairness.eod Equalized Odds: Mean of absolute differences between true positive and false positive rates across groups
fairness.pp Predictive Parity: Mean of absolute differences between ppv and npv across groups
fairness.acc_eod=.05 Accuracy under equalized odds < 0.05 constraint
fairness.acc_ppv=.05 Accuracy under ppv difference < 0.05 constraint

Additional custom fairness metrics can be easily constructed, the vignette contains more details. The fairness_tensor() function can be used with a Prediction in order to print group-wise confusion matrices for each protected attribute group. We can furthermore measure fairrness in each group separately using MeasureSubgroup and groupwise_metrics.

Fairness Visualizations

Visualizations can be used with either a Prediction, ResampleResult or a BenchmarkResult. For more information regarding those objects, refer to the mlr3 book.

Debiasing Methods

Debiasing methods can be used to improve the fairness of a given model. mlr3fairness includes several methods that can be used together with mlr3pipelines to obtain fair(er) models:

library(mlr3pipelines)
lrn = as_learner(po("reweighing_wts") %>>% lrn("classif.rpart"))
rs = resample(lrn, task = tsk("compas")$filter(1:500), rsmp("cv"))
rs$score(msr("fairness.acc"))

Overview:

key output.num input.type.train input.type.predict output.type.train
EOd 1 TaskClassif TaskClassif NULL
reweighing_os 1 TaskClassif TaskClassif TaskClassif
reweighing_wts 1 TaskClassif TaskClassif TaskClassif

Fair Learners

mlr3fairness furthermore contains several learners that can be used to directly learn fair models:

key package reference
regr.fairfrrm fairml Scutari et al., 2021
classif.fairfgrrm fairml Scutari et al., 2021
regr.fairzlm fairml Zafar et al., 2019
classif.fairzlrm fairml Zafar et al., 2019
regr.fairnclm fairml Komiyama et al., 2018

Datasets

mlr3fairness includes two fairness datasets: adult and compas. See ?adult and ?compas for additional information regarding columns.

You can load them using tsk(<key>).

Model Cards & Datasheets

An important step towards achieving more equitable outcomes for ML models is adequate documentation for datasets and models in machine learning. mlr3fairness comes with reporting aides for models and datasets. This provides empty templates that can be used to create interactive reports through RMarkdown.

Report Description Reference Example
report_modelcard Modelcard for ML models Mitchell et al., 2018 link
report_datasheet Datasheet for data sets Gebru et al., 2018 link
report_fairness Fairness Report -1 link

Usage:

The report_* functions instantiate a new .Rmd template that contains a set of pre-defined questions which can be used for reporting as well as initial graphics. The goal is that a user extends this .Rmd file to create comprehensive documentation for datasets, ML models or to document a model’s fairness. It can later be converted into a html report usingrmarkdown’s render.

rmdfile = report_datasheet()
rmarkdown::render(rmdfile)

Demo for Adult Dataset

We provide a short example detailing how mlr3fairness integrates with the mlr3 ecosystem.

library(mlr3fairness)

#Initialize Fairness Measure
fairness_measure = msr("fairness.fpr")
#Initialize tasks
task_train = tsk("adult_train")
task_test = tsk("adult_test")
#Initialize model
learner = lrn("classif.rpart", predict_type = "prob")

#Verify fairness metrics
learner$train(task_train)
predictions = learner$predict(task_test)
predictions$score(fairness_measure, task = task_test)

#Visualize the predicted probability score based on protected attribute.
fairness_prediction_density(predictions, task_test)

Extensions

Other Fairness Toolkits in R

Other Fairness Toolkits

Future Development

Several future developments are currently planned. Contributions are highly welcome!

Bugs, Feedback and Questions

mlr3fairness is a free and open source software project that encourages participation and feedback. If you have any issues, questions, suggestions or feedback, please do not hesitate to open an “issue” about it on the GitHub page! In case of problems / bugs, it is often helpful if you provide a “minimum working example” that showcases the behaviour.


  1. The fairness report is inspired by the Aequitas Bias report.↩︎