Are demographically invariant models and representations in medical imaging fair?
Eike Petersen, Enzo Ferrante, Melanie Ganz, Aasa Feragen

TL;DR
This paper examines whether medical imaging models should be demographically invariant, highlighting the complexities and potential benefits of encoding demographic attributes for fairness and performance.
Contribution
It clarifies the relationship between demographic invariance and fairness, and discusses the theoretical and practical challenges of enforcing invariance in medical imaging models.
Findings
Representation invariance implies demographic parity and equalized odds.
Invariance constraints may obscure important group differences.
Encoding demographics can be beneficial for fairness and accuracy.
Abstract
Medical imaging models have been shown to encode information about patient demographics such as age, race, and sex in their latent representation, raising concerns about their potential for discrimination. Here, we ask whether requiring models not to encode demographic attributes is desirable. We point out that marginal and class-conditional representation invariance imply the standard group fairness notions of demographic parity and equalized odds, respectively. In addition, however, they require matching the risk distributions, thus potentially equalizing away important group differences. Enforcing the traditional fairness notions directly instead does not entail these strong constraints. Moreover, representationally invariant models may still take demographic attributes into account for deriving predictions, implying unequal treatment - in fact, achieving representation invariance…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Diversity and Career in Medicine · Healthcare cost, quality, practices
MethodsCounterfactuals Explanations
