Astraea: Grammar-Based Fairness Testing

Software often produces biased outputs. In particular, machine learning (ML) based software is known to produce erroneous predictions when processing discriminatory inputs . Such unfair program behavior can be caused by societal bias. In the last few years, Amazon, Microsoft and Google have provided...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE transactions on software engineering Vol. 48; no. 12; pp. 5188 - 5211
Main Authors: Soremekun, Ezekiel, Udeshi, Sakshi, Chattopadhyay, Sudipta
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: New York IEEE 01.12.2022
IEEE Computer Society
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ISSN:0098-5589, 1939-3520
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Software often produces biased outputs. In particular, machine learning (ML) based software is known to produce erroneous predictions when processing discriminatory inputs . Such unfair program behavior can be caused by societal bias. In the last few years, Amazon, Microsoft and Google have provided software services that produce unfair outputs, mostly due to societal bias (e.g., gender or race). In such events, developers are saddled with the task of conducting fairness testing . Fairness testing is challenging; developers are tasked with generating discriminatory inputs that reveal and explain biases . We propose a grammar-based fairness testing approach (called Astraea ) which leverages context-free grammars to generate discriminatory inputs that reveal fairness violations in software systems. Using probabilistic grammars, Astraea also provides fault diagnosis by isolating the cause of observed software bias. Astraea 's diagnoses facilitate the improvement of ML fairness. Astraea was evaluated on 18 software systems that provide three major natural language processing (NLP) services. In our evaluation, Astraea generated fairness violations at a rate of about 18%. Astraea generated over 573K discriminatory test cases and found over 102K fairness violations. Furthermore, Astraea improves software fairness by about 76% via model-retraining, on average.
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ISSN:0098-5589
1939-3520
DOI:10.1109/TSE.2022.3141758