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People see more of their biases in algorithms
PsychologyPNAS

People see more of their biases in algorithms

B. Celiktutan, R. Cadario, et al.

People perceive more of their own biases (e.g., age, gender, race) in algorithmic decisions than in their own—even when the algorithm is trained on their exact choices and they are incentivized to be truthful. Those with a stronger bias blind spot especially saw more bias in algorithms and were likelier to make debiasing corrections to algorithm-attributed decisions. Research conducted by Begum Celiktutan, Romain Cadario, and Carey K. Morewedge.... show more
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Note: The citation metrics presented here have been sourced from Semantic Scholar and OpenAlex.

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