Authors
Flavio Chierichetti, Ravi Kumar, Silvio Lattanzi, Sergei Vassilvitskii
Publication date
2017
Journal
Advances in neural information processing systems
Volume
30
Description
We study the question of fair clustering under the {\em disparate impact} doctrine, where each protected class must have approximately equal representation in every cluster. We formulate the fair clustering problem under both the k-center and the k-median objectives, and show that even with two protected classes the problem is challenging, as the optimum solution can violate common conventions---for instance a point may no longer be assigned to its nearest cluster center! En route we introduce the concept of fairlets, which are minimal sets that satisfy fair representation while approximately preserving the clustering objective. We show that any fair clustering problem can be decomposed into first finding good fairlets, and then using existing machinery for traditional clustering algorithms. While finding good fairlets can be NP-hard, we proceed to obtain efficient approximation algorithms based on minimum cost flow. We empirically demonstrate the\emph {price of fairness} by quantifying the value of fair clustering on real-world datasets with sensitive attributes.
Total citations
2017201820192020202120222023202421848797310313168
Scholar articles
F Chierichetti, R Kumar, S Lattanzi, S Vassilvitskii - Advances in neural information processing systems, 2017