AI may have Dear Utol (2025): Pa-Yummy si Ma'am Episode 37sexist tendencies. But, sorry, the problem is still us humans.
Amazon recently scrapped an employee recruiting algorithm plagued with problems, according to a report from Reuters. Ultimately, the applicant screening algorithm did not return relevant candidates, so Amazon canned the program. But in 2015, Amazon had a more worrisome issue with this AI: it was down-ranking women.
The algorithm was only ever used in trials, and engineers manually corrected for the problems with bias. However, the way the algorithm functioned, and the existence of the product itself, speaks to real problems about gender disparity in tech and non-tech roles, and the devaluation of perceived female work.
SEE ALSO: Welp. Turns out AI learns gender and race stereotypes from humans.Amazon created its recruiting AI to automatically return the best candidates out of a pool of applicant resumes. It discovered that the algorithm would down-rank resumes when it included the word "women's," and even two women's colleges. It would also give preference to resumes that contained what Reuters called "masculine language," or strong verbs like "executed" or "captured."
These patterns began to appear because the engineers trained their algorithm with past candidates' resumes submitted over the previous ten years. And lo and behold, most of the most attractive candidates were men. Essentially, the algorithm found evidence of gender disparity in technical roles, and optimized for it; it neutrally replicated a societal and endemic preference for men wrought from an educational system and cultural bias that encourages men and discourages women in the pursuit of STEM roles.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Amazon emphasized in an email to Mashable that it scrapped the program because it was ultimately not returning relevant candidates; it dealt with the sexism problem early on, but the AI as a whole just didn't work that well.
However, the creation of hiring algorithms themselves — not just at Amazon, but across many companies — still speaks to another sort of gender bias: the devaluing of female-dominated Human Resources roles and skills.
According to the U.S. Department of Labor (via the workforce analytics provider company Visier), women occupy nearly three fourths of H.R. managerial roles. This is great news for overall female representation in the workplace. But the disparity exists thanks to another sort of gender bias.
There is a perception that H.R. jobs are feminine roles. The Globe and Mailwrites in its investigation of sexism and gender disparity in HR:
The perception of HR as a woman's profession persists. This image that it is people-based, soft and empathetic, and all about helping employees work through issues leaves it largely populated by women as the stereotypical nurturer. Even today, these "softer" skills are seen as less appealing – or intuitive – to men who may gravitate to perceived strategic, analytical roles, and away from employee relations.
Amazon and other companies that pursued AI integrations in hiring wanted to streamline the process, yes. But automating a people-based process shows a disregard for people-based skills that are less easy to mechanically reproduce, like intuition or rapport. Reuters reported that Amazon's AI identified attractive applicants through a five-star rating system, "much like shoppers rate products on Amazon"; who needs empathy when you've got five stars?
In Reuters' report, these companies suggest hiring AI as a compliment or supplement to more traditional methods, not an outright replacement. But the drive in the first place to automate a process by a female-dominated division shows the other side of the coin of the algorithm's preference for "male language"; where "executed" and "captured" verbs are subconsciously favored, "listened" or "provided" are shrugged off as inefficient.
The AI explosion is underway. That's easy to see in every evangelical smart phone or smart home presentation of just how much your robot can do for you, including Amazon's. But that means that society is opening itself up to create an even less inclusive world. A.I. can double down on discriminatory tendencies in the name of optimization, as we see with Amazon's recruiting A.I. (and others). And because A.I. is both built and led by humans (and often, mostly male humans) who may unintentionally transfer their unconscious sexist biases into business decisions, and the robots themselves.
So as our computers get smarter and permeate more areas of life and work, let's make sure to not lose what's human — alternately termed as what's "female" — along the way.
UPDATE 10/11/2018, 2:00 p.m PT:Amazon provided Mashable with the following statement about its recruiting algorithm.
“This was never used by Amazon recruiters to evaluate candidates.”
Topics Amazon Artificial Intelligence
Adobe is finally killing its hated Flash PlayerWhat's coming to Netflix in August 2017Henry Cavill's mustache is being digitally removed in 'Justice League' reshootsYour phone could charge in seconds with this magic batteryCreepy spyware has infected Macs for yearsLive! From Tomorrow: A lighter look at the futureChina is using AI to predict who will commit crime nextThe internet’s favorite fact checker Snopes is in deep troubleMS Paint is dead, this is how you get your Windows screenshotsBudding little makeup artist melts hearts during her first tutorial'Pokémon Go' Fest organizers kick off their apology tour on the right noteNokia's flagship smartphone to be announced on Aug. 16'Game of Thrones': Grey Worm and Missandei hooked upNetflix had no chill at ComicNo, Usain Bolt is not donating $2 million to Grenfell Tower fire victimsElon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg are both wrong about AIKushner said a fake Guccifer tried to blackmail him for BitcoinNo, Usain Bolt is not donating $2 million to Grenfell Tower fire victimsLego Boost is an awesome robotSiri still sucks on iPhone and The Rock can't change that NASA is finally talking about UFOs: 'This is a serious business' Mexico vs. Jamaica 2024 livestream: Watch Copa America for free A star blew up, and scientists snapped a photo of the violent explosion NASA Webb telescope discovers planet with truly mysterious history China files WTO complaint over EV tariffs as trade talks stall · TechNode Justice Department convicts five men for running a huge illegal streaming service Wordle today: The answer and hints for June 21 BYD launches first model featuring Huawei’s assisted driving tech · TechNode The planets Venus and Mars are amazing in June, and you should look up James Webb telescope may have found a rocky exoplanet with an atmosphere EV startup Neta starts layoff process, sued over late supplier payments · TechNode NASA finds a harsh world possibly packed with volcanoes NASA swoops by volcanic world and snaps jaw Scientists detect building block for life on Saturn's moon Enceladus Porsche looking for Chinese partners on EV batteries, ADAS: executive · TechNode Scientists search near supernova for aliens trying to contact us Astronomers cast doubt on 'runaway black hole' discovery A huge star just exploded, and you can really see it in the sky 103 ByteDance employees dismissed for corruption and other misconduct · TechNode Samsung joins TSMC to halt supply of sub
2.105s , 10132.6875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Dear Utol (2025): Pa-Yummy si Ma'am Episode 37】,Defense Information Network