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Insights into Fairness through Trust: Multi-scale Trust Quantification for Financial Deep Learning

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  • Alexander Wong
  • Andrew Hryniowski
  • Xiao Yu Wang

Abstract

The success of deep learning in recent years have led to a significant increase in interest and prevalence for its adoption to tackle financial services tasks. One particular question that often arises as a barrier to adopting deep learning for financial services is whether the developed financial deep learning models are fair in their predictions, particularly in light of strong governance and regulatory compliance requirements in the financial services industry. A fundamental aspect of fairness that has not been explored in financial deep learning is the concept of trust, whose variations may point to an egocentric view of fairness and thus provide insights into the fairness of models. In this study we explore the feasibility and utility of a multi-scale trust quantification strategy to gain insights into the fairness of a financial deep learning model, particularly under different scenarios at different scales. More specifically, we conduct multi-scale trust quantification on a deep neural network for the purpose of credit card default prediction to study: 1) the overall trustworthiness of the model 2) the trust level under all possible prediction-truth relationships, 3) the trust level across the spectrum of possible predictions, 4) the trust level across different demographic groups (e.g., age, gender, and education), and 5) distribution of overall trust for an individual prediction scenario. The insights for this proof-of-concept study demonstrate that such a multi-scale trust quantification strategy may be helpful for data scientists and regulators in financial services as part of the verification and certification of financial deep learning solutions to gain insights into fairness and trust of these solutions.

Suggested Citation

  • Alexander Wong & Andrew Hryniowski & Xiao Yu Wang, 2020. "Insights into Fairness through Trust: Multi-scale Trust Quantification for Financial Deep Learning," Papers 2011.01961, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2011.01961
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Mark Weber & Giacomo Domeniconi & Jie Chen & Daniel Karl I. Weidele & Claudio Bellei & Tom Robinson & Charles E. Leiserson, 2019. "Anti-Money Laundering in Bitcoin: Experimenting with Graph Convolutional Networks for Financial Forensics," Papers 1908.02591, arXiv.org.
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