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Consumer-Driven Explanations for Machine Learning Decisions: An Empirical Study of Robustness

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arxiv 2001.05573 v1 pith:DW73D56N submitted 2020-01-13 cs.LG cs.AIstat.ML

Consumer-Driven Explanations for Machine Learning Decisions: An Empirical Study of Robustness

classification cs.LG cs.AIstat.ML
keywords explanationsconsumer-drivendatalearningmachinenumberspracticalproposed
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Many proposed methods for explaining machine learning predictions are in fact challenging to understand for nontechnical consumers. This paper builds upon an alternative consumer-driven approach called TED that asks for explanations to be provided in training data, along with target labels. Using semi-synthetic data from credit approval and employee retention applications, experiments are conducted to investigate some practical considerations with TED, including its performance with different classification algorithms, varying numbers of explanations, and variability in explanations. A new algorithm is proposed to handle the case where some training examples do not have explanations. Our results show that TED is robust to increasing numbers of explanations, noisy explanations, and large fractions of missing explanations, thus making advances toward its practical deployment.

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