Goel, Krupa (2025) Can AI Reduce Bias in Tenant Screening? An In-Depth Analysis for the US Market. Journal of Engineering Research and Reports, 27 (3). pp. 137-159. ISSN 2582-2926
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Tenant screening in the U.S. rental market currently involves credit scores, criminal background checks, and rental history, which perpetuates historical prejudice against black and Hispanic tenants. Such methods continue to reinforce discrimination because of cultural disparities as well as previous unhealthy disparities in the distribution of wealth, justice, and renting. With a growing number of complaints about rental discriminative acts, there is a new hope that AI can help curb discriminative practices in the rental sector. Instead of focusing on race-based proxies, such as applicant's credit scores, the AI-based screening tools can look at a broader range of data, such as utility payments, stability of income, and previous employment records. However, it has to be doubted that the devices work appropriately with the data they were trained on since biased input results in biased output, so AI at least requires high-quality and diverse training data. Some AI systems' nature is also objectionable because they work more like a 'black box.' Despite the mentioned benefits, such as objectivity, efficiency, non-discrimination, and the like, there are also limitations, such as data bias, compliance issues, and black-box algorithms. The simple ways to approve the implementation involve incorporating various datasets, regular audits, reporting processes, and human supervision. Specific practical examples provided by Zillow, TurboTenant, and TenantCloud show that AI can make tenant screening less prejudicial. Where AI regulation is being discussed by such federal bodies as the FTC and the HUD, the collaboration of tech firms with civil rights organizations will be essential for designing truly equal and non-discriminatory AI. The potential for AI as a tool for tenant screening in the future must be overseen for having the potential to make the housing market fair and impartial if the existing ethical codes and the current laws are put into practice correctly.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | STM Digital > Engineering |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@stmdigital.org |
Date Deposited: | 27 Mar 2025 04:06 |
Last Modified: | 27 Mar 2025 04:06 |
URI: | http://elibrary.ths100.in/id/eprint/2056 |