Ding, Lei and Yu, Dengdeng and Xie, Jinhan and Guo, Wenxing and Hu, Shenggang and Liu, Meichen and Kong, Linglong and Dai, Hongsheng and Bao, Yanchun and Jiang, Bei (2022) Word Embeddings via Causal Inference: Gender Bias Reducing and Semantic Information Preserving. In: Thirty-Sixth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-22), 2022-02-22 - 2022-03-01, Vancouver. (In Press)
Ding, Lei and Yu, Dengdeng and Xie, Jinhan and Guo, Wenxing and Hu, Shenggang and Liu, Meichen and Kong, Linglong and Dai, Hongsheng and Bao, Yanchun and Jiang, Bei (2022) Word Embeddings via Causal Inference: Gender Bias Reducing and Semantic Information Preserving. In: Thirty-Sixth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-22), 2022-02-22 - 2022-03-01, Vancouver. (In Press)
Ding, Lei and Yu, Dengdeng and Xie, Jinhan and Guo, Wenxing and Hu, Shenggang and Liu, Meichen and Kong, Linglong and Dai, Hongsheng and Bao, Yanchun and Jiang, Bei (2022) Word Embeddings via Causal Inference: Gender Bias Reducing and Semantic Information Preserving. In: Thirty-Sixth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-22), 2022-02-22 - 2022-03-01, Vancouver. (In Press)
Abstract
With widening deployments of natural language processing (NLP) in daily life, inherited social biases from NLP models have become more severe and problematic. Previous studies have shown that word embeddings trained on human-generated corpora have strong gender biases that can produce discriminative results in downstream tasks. Previous debiasing methods focus mainly on modeling bias and only implicitly consider semantic information while completely overlooking the complex underlying causal structure among bias and semantic components. To address these issues, we propose a novel methodology that leverages a causal inference framework to effectively remove gender bias. The proposed method allows us to construct and analyze the complex causal mechanisms facilitating gender information flow while retaining oracle semantic information within word embeddings. Our comprehensive experiments show that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art results in gender-debiasing tasks. In addition, our methods yield better performance in word similarity evaluation and various extrinsic downstream NLP tasks.
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
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Additional Information: | Published proceedings: _not provided_ |
Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Health Faculty of Science and Health > Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, School of |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 18 Feb 2022 09:13 |
Last Modified: | 11 Dec 2024 19:39 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/31799 |
Available files
Filename: word_debias.pdf