Publication
MICCAI 2020
Conference paper

Fairness of Classifiers Across Skin Tones in Dermatology

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Abstract

Recent advances in computer vision have led to breakthroughs in the development of automated skin image analysis. However, no attempt has been made to evaluate the consistency in performance across populations with varying skin tones. In this paper, we present an approach to estimate skin tone in skin disease benchmark datasets and investigate whether model performance is dependent on this measure. Specifically, we use individual typology angle (ITA) to approximate skin tone in dermatology datasets. We look at the distribution of ITA values to better understand skin color representation in two benchmark datasets: 1) the ISIC 2018 Challenge dataset, a collection of dermoscopic images of skin lesions for the detection of skin cancer, and 2) the SD-198 dataset, a collection of clinical images capturing a wide variety of skin diseases. To estimate ITA, we first develop segmentation models to isolate non-diseased areas of skin. We find that the majority of the data in the two datasets have ITA values between 34.5 ∘ and 48 ∘ , which are associated with lighter skin, and is consistent with under-representation of darker skinned populations in these datasets. We also find no measurable correlation between accuracy of machine learning models and ITA values, though more comprehensive data is needed for further validation.