"I am trying to use AI to make a healthier and fairer world," Pierson said.
| | Emma Pierson named Zhang Family Endowed Professor at UC Berkeley EECSEmma Pierson, who joined the UC Berkeley Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS) earli... |
|
|
. . . . Soon after beginning a graduate program in computer science, also at Stanford, Pierson began working on police traffic stop data collected as part of the
Stanford Open Policing Project. The data revealed undeniable racial disparities, galvanizing Pierson to focus her work not only on improving health care, but also on
identifying and addressing racial inequalities.
"If you looked at the very basic statistics of the data — the racial disparities in how likely people were to be searched or arrested after a stop — the gaps were huge," Pierson said. "It was apparent that something catastrophic was going on."
However, her work on police traffic stop data also highlighted the importance of designing precise statistical tools for understanding the how and why of inequalities. In a study
published late last year, Pierson and her collaborator
Nora Gera, a graduate student at Cornell University, devised a new way to test whether inequities are caused by discrimination rather than other factors.
. . .
"Race is a socially constructed variable, not biological," Pierson said. "And historically, race has been included in medical decision-making and in algorithms in racist ways. By using race in these algorithms, we might worry about further entrenching health disparities."
Emphasis added.
1 comment:
"Just looking at her,you can tell she's a dummy."
Don Rickles
--GRA
Post a Comment