ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency

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Add to Calendar 2023-06-12 09:00:00 2023-06-15 18:00:00 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency Event details: https://www.law.uchicago.edu/events/acm-conference-fairness-accountability-and-transparency Hyatt Regency McCormick Place Chicago - US University of Chicago Law School blog@law.uchicago.edu America/Chicago public

Hyatt Regency McCormick Place
2233 S Martin Luther King Dr
Chicago, IL 60616
United States

Open to the public

Algorithmic systems are being adopted in a growing number of contexts, fueled by big data. These systems filter, sort, score, recommend, personalize, and otherwise shape human experience, increasingly making or informing decisions with major impact on access to, e.g., credit, insurance, healthcare, parole, social security, and immigration. Although these systems may bring myriad benefits, they also contain inherent risks, such as codifying and entrenching biases; reducing accountability, and hindering due process; they also increase the information asymmetry between individuals whose data feed into these systems and big players capable of inferring potentially relevant information.

ACM FAccT is an interdisciplinary conference dedicated to bringing together a diverse community of scholars from computer science, law, social sciences, and humanities to investigate and tackle issues in this emerging area. Research challenges are not limited to technological solutions regarding potential bias, but include the question of whether decisions should be outsourced to data- and code-driven computing systems. We particularly seek to evaluate technical solutions with respect to existing problems, reflecting upon their benefits and risks; to address pivotal questions about economic incentive structures, perverse implications, distribution of power, and redistribution of welfare; and to ground research on fairness, accountability, and transparency in existing legal requirements.

This event is presented by the Association for Computing Machinery. Aziz Huq and computer sciences professor Chenhao Tan are two of four co-chairs for the conference.