Rodriguez and Hall publish book chapter on novel approach to detect biases in foster youth data

Published November 11, 2022

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Maria Rodriguez

Maria Rodriguez.

Seventy Hall

Seventy Hall.

Kudos to Assistant Professor Maria Rodriguez, PhD candidate Seventy Hall and colleagues on the publication of their book chapter, "Mutual Information Scoring: Increasing Interpretability in Categorical Clustering Tasks with Applications to Child Welfare Data" in the book Social, Cultural and Behavioral Modeling.

Sankhe, P., Hall, S., Sage, M., Rodriguez, M., Chandola, V., & Joseph, K. (2022). Mutual information scoring: Increasing interpretability in categorical clustering tasks. In R. Thomson, M. N. Hussain, C. Dancy, & A. Pyke (Eds.), Social, cultural, and behavioral modeling: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference, SBP-BRiMS. Springer.

Abstract

Youth in the American foster care system are significantly more likely than their peers to face a number of negative life outcomes, from homelessness to incarceration. Administrative data on these youth have the potential to provide insights that can help identify ways to improve their path towards a better life. However, such data also suffer from a variety of biases, from missing data to reflections of systemic inequality. The present work proposes a novel, prescriptive approach to using these data to provide insights about both data biases and the systems and youth they track. Specifically, we develop a novel categorical clustering and cluster summarization methodology that allows us to gain insights into subtle biases in existing data on foster youth, and to provide insight into where further (often qualitative) research is needed to identify potential ways of assisting youth.