CAFIN: Centrality Aware Fairness inducing IN-processing for Unsupervised Representation Learning on Graphs
Unsupervised representation learning on (large) graphs has received significant attention in the research community due to the compactness and richness of the learned embeddings and the abundance of unlabelled graph data. When deployed, these node representations must be generated with appropriate fairness constraints to minimize bias induced by them on downstream tasks. Consequently, group and individual fairness notions for graph learning algorithms have been investigated for specific downstream tasks. One major limitation of these fairness notions is that they do not consider the connectivity patterns in the graph leading to varied node influence (or centrality power). In this paper, we design a centrality-aware fairness framework for inductive graph representation learning algorithms. We propose CAFIN (Centrality Aware Fairness inducing IN-processing), an in-processing technique that leverages graph structure to improve GraphSAGE's representations - a popular framework in the unsupervised inductive setting. We demonstrate the efficacy of CAFIN in the inductive setting on two popular downstream tasks - Link prediction and Node Classification. Empirically, they consistently minimize the disparity in fairness between groups across datasets (varying from 18 to 80 domains while incurring only a minimal performance cost.
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