AI Article Synopsis

  • Image recognition systems can process images without needing expert input, but they often come with biases.
  • The study evaluates gender biases in commercial image recognition by analyzing photos of U.S. Congress members and their Twitter images, revealing that women receive more appearance-related labels while being recognized less often than men.
  • This biased output not only impacts the visibility of women but also reinforces harmful stereotypes, raising concerns about the reliability of data derived from these systems.

Article Abstract

Image recognition systems offer the promise to learn from images at scale without requiring expert knowledge. However, past research suggests that machine learning systems often produce biased output. In this article, we evaluate potential gender biases of commercial image recognition platforms using photographs of U.S. members of Congress and a large number of Twitter images posted by these politicians. Our crowdsourced validation shows that commercial image recognition systems can produce labels that are correct and biased at the same time as they selectively report a subset of many possible true labels. We find that images of women received three times more annotations related to physical appearance. Moreover, women in images are recognized at substantially lower rates in comparison with men. We discuss how encoded biases such as these affect the visibility of women, reinforce harmful gender stereotypes, and limit the validity of the insights that can be gathered from such data.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9351609PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2378023120967171DOI Listing

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