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Relying on the Metrics of Evaluated Agents

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Listed:
  • Serena Wang
  • Michael I. Jordan
  • Katrina Ligett
  • R. Preston McAfee

Abstract

Online platforms and regulators face a continuing problem of designing effective evaluation metrics. While tools for collecting and processing data continue to progress, this has not addressed the problem of "unknown unknowns", or fundamental informational limitations on part of the evaluator. To guide the choice of metrics in the face of this informational problem, we turn to the evaluated agents themselves, who may have more information about how to measure their own outcomes. We model this interaction as an agency game, where we ask: "When does an agent have an incentive to reveal the observability of a metric to their evaluator?" We show that an agent will prefer to reveal metrics that differentiate the most difficult tasks from the rest, and conceal metrics that differentiate the easiest. We further show that the agent can prefer to reveal a metric "garbled" with noise over both fully concealing and fully revealing. This indicates an economic value to privacy that yields Pareto improvement for both the agent and evaluator. We demonstrate these findings on data from online rideshare platforms.

Suggested Citation

  • Serena Wang & Michael I. Jordan & Katrina Ligett & R. Preston McAfee, 2024. "Relying on the Metrics of Evaluated Agents," Papers 2402.14005, arXiv.org, revised Oct 2024.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2402.14005
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    References listed on IDEAS

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