|
|
|
|
|
by screye
2808 days ago
|
|
> The lower certainty would in turn lead to lower rankings for women even without any bias in the data. This is not true. Probabilistic-ly speaking, if we are computing P(hiring | gender);
Lower certainty means there is a high variance in prior over women. However, over a large dataset, the "score" would almost certainly be equal to the mean of the distribution, and be independent of the variance. In simpler words, if there was a frequency diagram of scores for each gender (most likely bell curves), then only the peak of the bell curve would matter. The flatness / thinness of the curve would be completely irrelevant to the final score. The peak is the mean, and the flatness is the uncertainty. Only the mean matters. |
|