[Colloquium] TODAY 3/9 Michael Kim (Berkeley) Foundations for Responsible Machine Learning

Holly Santos hsantos at uchicago.edu
Thu Mar 9 08:38:07 CST 2023


Department of Computer Science

Michael Kim
Postdoctoral Researcher
UC Berkeley, Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science

Thursday, March 9th
2:00pm - 3:00pm
In Person: John Crerar Library 298

Zoom:
https://uchicagogroup.zoom.us/j/95543977900?pwd=MjJqY1hRZFEvTGNhaEFIclpKTXVKUT09

Meeting ID: 955 4397 7900
Passcode: 314623

Title: Foundations for Responsible Machine Learning

Abstract:
Algorithms make predictions about people constantly.  The spread of such prediction systems has raised concerns that machine learning algorithms may exhibit problematic behavior, especially against individuals from marginalized groups.  This talk will provide an overview of my research building a theory of "responsible" machine learning.  I will highlight a notion of fairness in prediction, called Multicalibration (ICML'18), which requires predictions to be well-calibrated, not simply overall, but on every group that can be meaningfully identified from data.  This "multi-group" approach strengthens the guarantees of group fairness definitions, without incurring the costs (statistical and computational) associated with individual-level protections.  Additionally, I will present a new paradigm for learning, Outcome Indistinguishability (STOC'21), which provides a broad framework for learning predictors satisfying formal guarantees of responsibility.  Finally, I will discuss the threat of Undetectable Backdoors (FOCS'22), which represent a serious challenge for building trust in machine learning models.

Bio:
Michael P. Kim is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science at UC Berkeley, hosted by Shafi Goldwasser.  Before this, Kim completed his PhD in Computer Science at Stanford University, advised by Omer Reingold.  Kim's research addresses basic questions about the appropriate use of machine learning algorithms that make predictions about people.  More generally, Kim is interested in how the computational lens (i.e., algorithms and complexity theory) can provide insights into emerging societal and scientific challenges.

[B696370B-1756-4082-9E99-403D760B2265.jpeg]

---
Holly Santos
Executive Assistant to Michael J. Franklin, Chairman
Department of Computer Science
The University of Chicago
5730 S Ellis Ave-217   Chicago, IL 60637
P: 773-834-8977
hsantos at uchicago.edu

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