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Themis™

Themis™ is a testing-based approach for measuring discrimination in a software system. For the best explanation of the underlying problem Themis™ solves, Themis™ algorithms, and an evaluation of Themis™, read our paper Fairness Testing: Testing Software for Discrimination. This work won an ACM Distinguished Paper Award at the ESEC/FSE 2017 Conference.

This repository contains Themis™ (in Themis1.0/), instructions for using Themis™ (this README.md), a replication package to replicate the experiments presented in the ESEC/FSE 2017 paper (in ESEC.FSE.2017.Experimental.Replication) with its own README.md, and subject systems on which Themis™ has been evaluated (subjectSystems/).

Recent News Coverage

Several recent news articles have been published about our work on discrimination testing and Themis™.

We also appeared in the ACM News on August 21, 2017, and the MIT Technology Download on August 24, 2017.

Measuring Discrimination

The Themis™ implementation measures two kinds of discrimination: group discrimination and causal discrimination.

Imagine you have a piece of software that determines if an applicant should be given a loan, and you want to know if this software discriminates with respect to race. (And let's say in this scenario, there are two races, green and purple.) One way to measure discrimination is to ask "do the same fractions of green and purple people get loans?" This measure is called group discrimination, and has been identified in prior work, e.g., [2, 3, 4, 5], among others. Specifically, the group discrimination score is the difference between the largest and smallest fraction of people who get a loan in a set of groups of people (e.g., one group per race). If 40% of purple people get a loan but only 30% of green people get a loan, the discrimination score with respect to race is 40%-30%=10%.

However, group discrimination has two limitations. First, it may fail to observe some discrimination. Suppose the software discriminates against half the purple people, e.g., those who live in Greenville, but favors the other half of the purple people, e.g., those who live in Purpleville. These two kinds of discrimination can cancel out and be hidden by the group discrimination score. Second, software may circumvent discrimination detection. For example, suppose the software recommends loans for a random 30% of the purple people, and the 30% of the green people who have the most savings. Then the group discrimination score with respect to race will deem the software perfectly fair, despite a clear discrepancy in how the applications are processed based on race.

The causal discrimination score [1] addresses these shortcomings. Software testing enables a unique opportunity to conduct causal experiments to determine statistical causation between inputs and outputs. For example, it is possible to execute the software on two individuals identical in every way except race, and verify if changing the race causes a change in the output. Causal discrimination says that to be fair with respect to a set of characteristics, the software must produce the same output for every two individuals who differ only in those characteristics. For example, the software is fair with respect to race if for all pairs of individuals who are identical in every way except for race, the software either gives both of them or neither of them the loan. The fraction of people for whom software causally discriminates is a measure of causal discrimination.

Why test software for discrimination?

Today, software determines who gets a loan or gets hired, computes risk-assessment scores that help decide who goes to jail and who is set free, and aids in diagnosing and treating medical patients. The increased role of software makes software fairness a critical property. Data-driven software has the ability to shape human behavior: it affects the products we view and purchase, the news articles we read, the social interactions we engage in, and, ultimately, the opinions we form. Biases in data and software risk forming and perpetuating biases in society. For example, prior work has demonstrated racial bias in online ad delivery systems, where online search for traditionally-minority names was more likely to yield ads related to arrest records. Such software behavior can contribute to racist stereotypes and other grave societal consequences.

While prior research has considered discrimination in software, Themis™ focuses on measuring causality in discrimination. Software testing allows Themis™ to perform hypothesis testing, such as "does changing a person's race affect whether the software recommends giving that person a loan?" This approach measures discrimination more accurately than prior work that focused on identifying differences in software output distributions, correlations, or mutual information between inputs and outputs.

Software discrimination may occur unintentionally, e.g., because of algorithmic design errors, implementation bugs, emergent properties of component interactions, or automatically learned properties from biased data. Data-based decisions, such as those made by software relying on data mining or machine learning in particular, pose a serious challenge because the mined decision models are often not human readable. Themis™ uses software testing to find discrimination, whether it is intentional or unintentional. Themis™' goal is to empower the stakeholders to better understand software behavior, judge when unwanted bias is present, and, ultimately, improve the software.

Running Themis™:

The main entry point for Themis™ is main.py. It allows the user to run Themis™ via a configuration file (settings.txt). main.py uses Themis.py, which implements most of the Themis™ functionality.

To run Themis, you need to do two things. You need to specify an input schema file (settings.txt) and modify main.py to specify which discrimination type to compute.

Input schema

Themis™ needs to know how to run the software being tested and the input schema for the valid inputs to the software. The settings.txt consists of the number of input characteristics, a description for each characteristic, and the command to run the software. Because Themis™ requires a particular command-line format, it is likely to require writing a simple wrapper around the software under test.

Refer to this example settings.txt file:

number of input characteristics: 2
1 race categorical green purple
2 age continuousInt 18,120
command: python loan.py

The first line of settings.txt is the number of input characteristics the software requires. It is followed by one attribute per line, each containing space-separated number, name, type, and finally the set of possible valuations.

The attribute number and name must be unique. There are two supported characteristic types: categorical and continuousInt. Categorical types list all possible characteristic valuations, whereas continuousInt types list the (comma-separated) minimum and maximum integer values the characteristic can take on.

Next, settings.txt includes the executable part of the command to run the software, preceded by command:.

Themis™ expects the software to run using the command executable, followed by a combination of characteristic name and value pairs. For example, for the above settings.txt, Themis™ may execute the following command:

python loan.py race green age 18

and expects a binary output in the form of 0 or 1 printed to standard output.

Specifying what to measure

There are two ways to use Themis™. First, given a set of input characteristics and an acceptable error bound, Themis™ can compute the group and the causal discrimination scores for those input characteristics. Second, given a discrimination threshold and an acceptable error bound, Themis™ can compute all characteristics with respect to which the software discriminates at least as much as the threshold. To make these computations, Themis™ generates test suites.

To use Themis™, one creates a main.py script out of a combination of the following five commands:

causalDiscrimination(..)
groupDiscrimination(..)
discriminationSearch(..)
printSoftwareDetails()
getTestSuite()

We now describe the five commands.

causalDiscrimination(characteristics, confidence, errorBound)

The characteristics argument is a list of comma-separated names of the input characteristics whose causal discrimination is to be measured.

The confidence and errorBound arguments are each a number between 0 and 1.

Example use: causalDiscrimination({race, age}, 0.99, 0.01}) returns the causal discrimination score with respect to race and age that is within 1% of the true causal discrimination score with confidence at least 99%.

groupDiscrimination(characteristics, confidence, errorBound)

The characteristics argument is a list of comma-separated names of the input characteristics whose group discrimination is to be measured.

The confidence and errorBound arguments are each a number between 0 and 1.

Example use: groupDiscrimination({race, age}, 0.99, 0.01}) returns the group discrimination score with respect to race and age that is within 1% of the true group discrimination score with confidence at least 99%.

discriminationSearch(discriminationThreshold, confidence, errorBound, discriminationType)

The discriminationThreshold, confidence, and errorBound arguments are each a number between 0 and 1.

The discriminationType argument can be one of "causal", "group", or "causalandgroup".

Example use: discriminationSearch(0.1, 0.99, 0.01, causalandgroup) returns all characteristics such that either the causal or the group discrimination score is between 9% and 11% (10% \pm 1%) with confidence of at least 99%.

printSoftwareDetails()

Prints the input scema for the software.

getTestSuite()

Must be called after a discrimination-computing function (causalDiscrimination, groupDiscrimination, or discriminationSearch). Prints the test suite used for the last discrimination-computing function.

Subject systems

The evaluation in [1] applied Themis™ to eight subject software systems (named A-H), trained in different ways, for a total of twenty different software system instances. The subjectSystems/ folder contains the code for these subject systems.

A/ Discrimination-aware logistic regression [2] and Themis™ wrapper scripts for executing it.

B/ Discrimination-aware decision tree classifier [3] and Themis™ wrapper scripts for executing it.

C/ Discrimination-aware naive Bayes classifier [4] and Themis™ wrapper scripts for executing it.

D/ Discrimination-aware decision tree classifier [5] and Themis™ wrapper scripts for executing it.

fairness_unaware/ Four standard discrimination-unaware classifiers, described as systems E (naive Bayes), F (decision tree), G (logistic regression), and H (support vector machines) in [1].

Collaborators

Sainyam Galhotra Yuriy Brun Alexandra Meliou
Sainyam Galhotra Yuriy Brun Alexandra Meliou

Funding

This work is supported by the National Science Foundation under grants no. CCF-1453474, IIS-1453543, and CNS-1744471.

References

[1] Sainyam Galhotra, Yuriy Brun, and Alexandra Meliou, Fairness Testing: Testing Software for Discrimination, in European Software Engineering Conference and ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering (ESEC/FSE), pages 498-510, Paderborn, Germany, September 2017.

[2] Muhammad Bilal Zafar, Isabel Valera, Manuel Gomez Rodriguez, and Krishna P. Gummadi. Learning fair classifiers. CoRR, abs/1507.05259, 2015.

[3] Faisal Kamiran, Toon Calders, and Mykola Pechenizkiy. Discrimination aware decision tree learning. In International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM), pages 869-874, Sydney, Australia, December 2010.

[4] Toon Calders, Faisal Kamiran, and Mykola Pechenizkiy. Building classifiers with independency constraints. In Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM) Workshops, pages 13-18, Miami, FL, USA, December 2009.

[5] Indre Zliobaite, Faisal Kamiran, and Toon Calders. Handling conditional discrimination. In International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM), pages 992-1001, Vancouver, BC, Canada, December 2011.

Licensing

Themis™ is distributed only to end users and for academic use only.

Themis™ can also be licensed for commercial use through the University of Massachusetts Amherst. To obtain a license, contact Thomas Ferguson (tferguson@umass.edu) and Robert MacWright (macwright@umass.edu), and copy Yuriy Brun (brun@cs.umass.edu).

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