
Using AI to minimise bias in an employee performance review
Performance reviews are intended to be objective, but all humans experience bias. While many companies opt for group reviews as a way to de-bias and challenge the status quo, what is being said in those meetings, how those comments are said and the context for those remarks are just
as important. At the same time, most people’s attention span is of shorter duration than a review and being promoted depends on what bosses remember about their direct reports, their subjective measure of employee success, and their ability to convince others that employee accomplishments
are deserving of a reward. As a result of these compounding factors, meta-bias patterns emerge in company culture. Combine those limitations with the fact that reviews are often a breeding ground for subtle — and not-so-subtle — bias, and it begs the question: Why are we not using
technology to help? With developments in natural language processing (NLP) and conversational AI (CAI), computers can identify biased phrases in real time. Although these technologies have a long way to go to match human nuance, we can at least flag problematic phrases during something as
significant as performance reviews. And with the right inputs rooted in social science and normalised based on geography, contextual relationships and culture, we could be surfacing insidious bias throughout organisations. This paper examines how a future CAI tool could reduce bias and, eventually,
teach people to re-evaluate and reframe their thinking. In a performance review setting, the system would flag problematic phrases as they are said, and committee heads would stop the conversation. The committee would then evaluate the comment, ask the presenter for further information, and
only continue once there is sufficient clarity. Once the discussion concludes, the review cycle would continue until another phrase is identified. The system serves to be persistently aware throughout all conversations and highlight potential bias for everyone to learn from. Beyond pointing
out biased phrases during a performance review, a combination of NLP and CAI can serve as a foundation for company-wide analytics. Organisations can track who is speaking in a majority of meetings, what was said, who challenges biased phrases, whether or not certain types of people are misrepresented
in reviews more or less frequently, and so on. All this information gives a fundamentally new picture of what is happening inside a company, laying the groundwork for human resource (HR)-related metrics that individuals (and the company as a whole) can improve over time.
Keywords: AI; bias; bias detection system; bias detection tool; performance evaluations; performance review; performance reviews; review process
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: 1: Strategic Partnerships Manager 2: Chief Technology Officer
Publication date: January 1, 2022
- Journal of AI, Robotics and Workplace Automation is the major professional and academic journal for all those involved in researching and applying artificial intelligence and related, often complementary, techniques or technologies for automating tasks and processes within organisations. The Journal is edited by leading automation and AI expert, Christopher M. Johannessen, Digital Transformation Strategist, Axis Group. Each quarterly 100-page issue provides an international forum for detailed, practical and thought-provoking articles, case studies, research papers and reviews written by leading experts in the fields of AI, robotics and workplace automation. The journal's target readership includes anyone with an interest in artificial intelligence (AI), robotics (hardware or software such as Robotic Process Automation), business process management/smart workflow and cognitive extensions of AI (e.g., chatbots, robo advisors), and functional applications of these capabilities (e.g., operations automation or marketing automation).
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