Skip to main content

Module for measuring feature dependence for black-box models

Project description

FairML is a python toolbox auditing the machine learning models for bias.

Build Status Coverage Status GitHub license GitHub issues

Logo

Logo

Description

Predictive models are increasingly been deployed for the purpose of determining access to services such as credit, insurance, and employment. Despite societal gains in efficiency and productivity through deployment of these models, potential systemic flaws have not been fully addressed, particularly the potential for unintentional discrimination. This discrimination could be on the basis of race, gender, religion, sexual orientation, or other characteristics. This project addresses the question: how can an analyst determine the relative significance of the inputs to a black-box predictive model in order to assess the model’s fairness (or discriminatory extent)?

We present FairML, an end-to-end toolbox for auditing predictive models by quantifying the relative significance of the model’s inputs. FairML leverages model compression and four input ranking algorithms to quantify a model’s relative predictive dependence on its inputs. The relative significance of the inputs to a predictive model can then be used to assess the fairness (or discriminatory extent) of such a model. With FairML, analysts can more easily audit cumbersome predictive models that are difficult to interpret.s of black-box algorithms and corresponding input data.

Installation

You can pip install this package, via github - i.e. this repo - using the following commands:

pip install https://github.com/adebayoj/fairml/archive/master.zip

or you can clone the repository doing:

git clone https://github.com/adebayoj/fairml.git

sudo python setup.py install

Methodology

Methodology

Methodology

Code Demo

Now we show how to use the fairml python package to audit a black-box model.

# First we import modules for model building and data processing.

import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
from sklearn.linear_model import LogisticRegression

"""
Now, we import the two key methods from fairml.
audit_model takes:

- (required) black-box function, which is the model to be audited
- (required) sample_data to be perturbed for querying the function. This has to be a pandas dataframe with no missing data.

- other optional parameters that control the mechanics of the auditing process, for example:
  - number_of_runs : number of iterations to perform
  - interactions : flag to enable checking model dependence on interactions.

audit_model returns an overloaded dictionary where keys are the column names of input pandas dataframe and values are lists containing model  dependence on that particular feature. These lists of size number_of_runs.

"""
from fairml import audit_model
from fairml import plot_generic_dependence_dictionary

Above, we provide a quick explanation of the key fairml functionality. Now we move into building an example model that we’d like to audit.

# read in the propublica data to be used for our analysis.
propublica_data = pd.read_csv(
    filepath_or_buffer="./doc/example_notebooks/"
    "propublica_data_for_fairml.csv")

# create feature and design matrix for model building.
compas_rating = propublica_data.score_factor.values
propublica_data = propublica_data.drop("score_factor", 1)


# this is just for demonstration, any classifier or regressor
# can be used here. fairml only requires a predict function
# to diagnose a black-box model.

# we fit a quick and dirty logistic regression sklearn
# model here.
clf = LogisticRegression(penalty='l2', C=0.01)
clf.fit(propublica_data.values, compas_rating)

Now let’s audit the model built with FairML.

#  call audit model with model
total, _ = audit_model(clf.predict, propublica_data)

# print feature importance
print(total)

# generate feature dependence plot
fig = plot_dependencies(
    total.get_compress_dictionary_into_key_median(),
    reverse_values=False,
    title="FairML feature dependence"
)
plt.savefig("fairml_ldp.eps", transparent=False, bbox_inches='tight')

The demo above produces the figure below.

Example Output

Example Output

Feel free to email the authors with any questions:

Data

The data used for the demo above is available in the repo at: /doc/example_notebooks/propublica_data_for_fairml.csv

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

fairml-0.1.1.5rc5.tar.gz (9.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file fairml-0.1.1.5rc5.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fairml-0.1.1.5rc5.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 9.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for fairml-0.1.1.5rc5.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 23266ddf5bfb829762045e928c03aeb9c03feb916f3c23395300fa935568542f
MD5 81a4e163f8dce7c665a67c6ebf15b588
BLAKE2b-256 a7e531bcd49c40121e12d5aa12707da59535a81e72ef0e7cb871fc188e7c1283

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page