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Statistical Methods for Assessing Differences in False Non-Match Rates Across Demographic Groups

Methodology 2022-08-24 v1 Applications

Abstract

Biometric recognition is used across a variety of applications from cyber security to border security. Recent research has focused on ensuring biometric performance (false negatives and false positives) is fair across demographic groups. While there has been significant progress on the development of metrics, the evaluation of the performance across groups, and the mitigation of any problems, there has been little work incorporating statistical variation. This is important because differences among groups can be found by chance when no difference is present. In statistics this is called a Type I error. Differences among groups may be due to sampling variation or they may be due to actual difference in system performance. Discriminating between these two sources of error is essential for good decision making about fairness and equity. This paper presents two novel statistical approaches for assessing fairness across demographic groups. The first methodology is a bootstrapped-based hypothesis test, while the second is simpler test methodology focused upon non-statistical audience. For the latter we present the results of a simulation study about the relationship between the margin of error and factors such as number of subjects, number of attempts, correlation between attempts, underlying false non-match rates(FNMR's), and number of groups.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2208.10948,
  title  = {Statistical Methods for Assessing Differences in False Non-Match Rates Across Demographic Groups},
  author = {Michael Schuckers and Sandip Purnapatra and Kaniz Fatima and Daqing Hou and Stephanie Schuckers},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.10948},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Paper for Understanding and Mitigating Demographic Bias in Biometric Systems(UMDBB) Workshop part of 2022 International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR)

R2 v1 2026-06-25T01:54:11.776Z