Artificial Intelligence is Coming for Hiring, and It Might Not Be That Bad (bloomberg.com) 149
Even with all of its problems, AI is a step up from the notoriously biased recruiting process, a report argues. From the report: Artificial intelligence promises to make hiring an unbiased utopia. There's certainly plenty of room for improvement. Employee referrals, a process that tends to leave underrepresented groups out, still make up a bulk of companies' hires. Recruiters and hiring managers also bring their own biases to the process, studies have found, often choosing people with the "right-sounding" names and educational background. Across the pipeline, companies lack racial and gender diversity, with the ranks of underrepresented people thinning at the highest levels of the corporate ladder. "Identifying high-potential candidates is very subjective," said Alan Todd, CEO of CorpU, a technology platform for leadership development. "People pick who they like based on unconscious biases."
AI advocates argue the technology can eliminate some of these biases. Instead of relying on people's feelings to make hiring decisions, companies such as Entelo and Stella.ai use machine learning to detect the skills needed for certain jobs. The AI then matches candidates who have those skills with open positions. The companies claim not only to find better candidates, but also to pinpoint those who may have previously gone unrecognized in the traditional process.
AI advocates argue the technology can eliminate some of these biases. Instead of relying on people's feelings to make hiring decisions, companies such as Entelo and Stella.ai use machine learning to detect the skills needed for certain jobs. The AI then matches candidates who have those skills with open positions. The companies claim not only to find better candidates, but also to pinpoint those who may have previously gone unrecognized in the traditional process.
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They'll replace it with another one, because yellow people are actually smarter.
Nah, I'm joking. The other answer is correct.
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Actually, brown. I've seen a rather interesting story of East Asians being angsty about their hiring performance compared to Indians in US:
https://www.scmp.com/news/chin... [scmp.com]
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While most East Asians are Chinese, I think it's a bit unfair to just ignore Koreans and Japanese. You had heard of them, right?
Also, it's about immigrants which introduces large numbers of confounding factors. What about the large number of people who are ethnically Asian but grew up in the USA, are maybe third generation or more?
Finally, it's about ease of being hired. That doesn't necessarily mean they're smarter, as anyone who's dealt with Wipeno will attest - maybe they just have better connections.
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I find it funny that you failed to read both my post, and the article, which comes out rather clear in your accusations.
See, I actually talk about hiring for reasons mentioned in the article:
>While a rapidly growing number of Chinese families are sending their children to get what they believe is better education in Western countries, those who stay on to look for work often appear to be much less competitive in the jobs market than they are in the classroom.
And the author makes it clear that while she f
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You seem to have totally missed that being hired isn't just about being smart - there's cultural factors plus having connections.
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I see that I'm talking to someone who's so utterly stupid, he cannot read the story even after being pointed toward reading it twice.
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Confucious say, "Fuck you, Mister Anonymous Coward." :D
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Confucius also say, just because eyes are round does not mean they are open for seeing.
More applicants than jobs (Score:3, Interesting)
You'll still do interviews to pick between them. Hell, my Kid had an in person interview to apply for Nursing School so she could get into her 300 level courses. They had twice as many qualified students as openings...
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Not really now since under Trump there is for the first time more job openings than workers.
I know for programmers, there have been more openings most places than available workers. We've had more job openings for programmers than employees(!) for around five years despite the fact we pay over 20% more than average. There just aren't enough workers.
Re:More applicants than jobs (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah the trend definitely moved with Trump taking office. /Sarcasm
https://tinyurl.com/y72ty3u3 [tinyurl.com]
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Under Trump, or since 2013?
A meaningless statistic (Score:2)
As for those programming jobs, good luck getting one without a college degree. In the 80s and 90s I knew lots of guys who programmed for a living with nothing but a high school diploma and took h
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Average of what? All wages? 20% over what they pay a Mickey D's? Do you also pay benefits? What are the work requirements and the job description requirements? Just saying "20% more" is meaningless.
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What programming languages do you use? There are some areas that programmers won't dare to go because the API's are undocumented and undebuggable, or the employers don't give out references when you leave.
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Funny how that's only a problem when the other side is in charge...
Once you're well and truly fucked, you should spend all the chumps will lend you, then hide the assets. That isn't what the US government is doing though, they're just pissing it away on bread and circuses (known as 'investing in the future' in DC).
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GOP's always wanted cheap imported labor - that's why Romney's hire them to mow the lawn repeatedly, Trump had them build his towers then stiffed them.
I forget, which party is pushing open borders... oh yeah, the Democrats. You suggesting only Republicans want more immigrants is about as current as me suggesting liberals are tolerant of different ideas and free speech. As is so often true anything bi-partisan is that they agreed to F over the middle class some more.
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Own report is 20%, obviously not enough, no telling how deluded their job categorization is...Reading comprehension isn't something I'd be talking about, if I was you.
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The world has more qualified workers than job openings
You've obviously never tried to find a decent plumber on Craigslist.
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is the problem. The world has more qualified workers than job openings except at the very, very top end of the spectrum (yeah, we can always use more math wizs and surgeons, very few folks have the genetics for that, and yes, a steady hand is genetic). You'll still do interviews to pick between them. Hell, my Kid had an in person interview to apply for Nursing School so she could get into her 300 level courses. They had twice as many qualified students as openings...
But matching the applicant for the job is still difficult.
Job descriptions are vague or full of way too much requirements. I have been in jobs where two years into the job, I could only satisfy one line of the job requirement. Other jobs where I ended up doing things that were completely different than what the job description said.
It's either recruiters who have a worse sense of what is required or my very limited personal connections that I've gotten jobs from. Online job applications has never worked
meritocracy? (Score:4, Insightful)
the important question is, will the so called "artificial intelligence" (in reality, a data analysis algorithm running on fast computing infrastructure, using fuzzy logic to arrive at faster good enough probabilistic solution, rather than harder best solution, to a problem) look at only data relating to candidates' competency about the job allied to? or will it look at other data too? "diversity" quotas of the employer, personal appearance and tact, social interaction and team work skills, etc? and how exactly?
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It cannot. Oh, maybe it can identify low-skill, low-problem candidates, but these you do not want to hire in the first place. Any job that requires any kind of actual skill will be filled in different ways by different people, because you have to bring your personality into it if skill is needed. Since artificial stupidity has absolutely no understanding of anything, it cannot determine whether anybody is a match for any job requiring actual skill. This is just more of the stupidity that you can successfull
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Maybe it can even better....
Don't train it with WhizKids job applications to try to pick those, feed it with your existing staff. Might find good matches for your existing team. (ok.. if your existing team already sucks at its job, you should NOT try this at home...)
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This is just more of the stupidity that you can successfully hire (and manage) people without seeing them as people.
TFS says it's the exact opposite. By eliminating biases it considers people's actual skills, rather than lumping them into groups and making assumptions based on things as trivial as their name or gender.
For example, certain universities carry prestige. A candidate who went to Oxford or Harvard or Tokyo instantly looks better than one who has some low ranked institution on their CV. But that doesn't necessarily mean they don't have the skills or talent required.
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You missed the point of the GP. They said,
Any job that requires any kind of actual skill will be filled in different ways by different people, because you have to bring your personality into it if skill is needed.
As an example of this, I was hired to fill a position (turns out it was two of them...) where the tradition had been to do a lot of manual work, and rely upon institutional knowledge of legacy systems. I was selected for an interview not because I was good at or had these things, but because I had strong skills in parallel areas.
My experience was in modernizing a vaguely similar system, but not one that you'd immediately recognize as similar enough to the system I
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This isn't something that AI will be able to successfully figure out for quite some time yet. Over time it should get better and get there, but I expect that to take a long time. Intuition and creative problem solving are going to be some of the last things that AI is going to be able to tackle.
At the moment there is no indication these systems will ever be able to tackle these. Don't forget that we do not have AI at all. All we have is dumb statistical classificators called (weak) AI for marketing purposes (i.e. lying to make thinks look massively better than they are).
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This is the sort of modern "no true scotsman" argument that's starting to popup.
"why, the logical conclusion of that AI is biased because the man who programmed it is biased!"
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As opposed to "human intelligence" which is in reality is data analysis algorithms and gut feelings running on slow meatspace hardware, using fuzzy logic to arrive at a good enough probabilistic solution, rather than harder best solution, to a problem.
Hopefully it makes for a better meritocracy. But no-joke, if you hire a brilliant codemonkey who will lash out at anyone with the audacity of consuming unholy substances like caffeine... They're going to bring down the whole team. And the pro-diversity cr
Re: meritocracy? (Score:2)
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This is the AI version of buzzword bingo, typically played by stupid HR departments, except this time it is outsourced. There is a reason by people go by connections. It is a way to know you are dealing with someone that is trustworthy.
I expect a thriving business of SEO like businesses popping up. All of a sudden the AI will signal an abundance of qualified laborers from India or the like.
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Do you want to know how I know you are not an 'HR pro'?
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Being an HR "pro" is a very, very bad thing.
A neural network is a dumb filter (Score:2)
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I don't think it will even work for "commodity" jobs.
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The whole thing is hype. How many organisations even hire enough people to produce a decent training set?
A couple of countries' armed forces, Indian State Railways, and maybe the UK NHS.
What's that, they could share them? ROFLMAO!
What's a training set? You aren't using AI. Hype, like I said.
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Indeed. Hype driven by the incompetent that hope there will _finally_ be a magic technology that will help them to not suck at their job. Reminds me of the ever ongoing search for a magic programming language that will make language that will make bad coders write code that does not suck. Completely impossible, obviously as that is not where the problem lies.
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The words "neural network" appear nowhere, which is just as well. Unlike neural networks, most machine learning algorithms can explain themselves to a statistician.
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In this case the 'AI' is not really a filter but a set method of evaluating candidates upon the same basis. It is easy to do, simply come up with what ever you deem to be the important values of the job, and score each candidate against those values. Total up the scores and let it make the choice for you. Keep in mind, the potential employees who are best at the interview process are very likely to be psychopaths, smooth charming, shamelessly lying arse holes. Coming up with the correct metrics to score for
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Which human that programs the models?
Will they have the same stupid requirements? (Score:2)
You know, 5+ years experience in a technology only 2 years old?
I bet an AI would work, as long as it's not setup by an HR drone.
Re:Will they have the same stupid requirements? (Score:5, Informative)
Generally speaking, those "searching for unicorns" requirements are all about giving corporations an excuse to replace American workers with H1-B foreigners for pennies on the dollar.
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To think that americans were the one selling that "competition is great!" thing. It's not so fun when you actually have to compete huh?
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You realize that requirement is for '5 years successfully bullshitting skills not possessed'?
If you can't tell that kind of lie, you will be useless in a client facing role.
Garbage in... (Score:5, Insightful)
If the training data is biased, the AI will learn to be biased. There have been numerous reports on this. [newscientist.com]
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Since artificial stupidity has no understanding of anything and can just sort-of replicate labelled training data statistically when used as a classifier in this way, it will have exactly the same problems as the training data, plus a few more. And the training data will be biased and bad, because if we could do this better, we would.
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It's much easier to control the training data for an AI than it is for a human. Maybe the hiring manager has been reading Slashdot and picked up a slight bias against people who did a Gender Studies course along side their major subject.
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It's much easier to control the training data for an AI than it is for a human.
I agree, it should be easier. However, many AI projects have fallen into this trap. The AI logic is only half of the solution. The other half is high quality training data. Too many projects simply feed historical data to the AI without accounting for the fact the historical decisions were made by humans, and humans have bias. All humans have bias, and most are unaware. This is not insurmountable, but it is difficult. How do you account for something you are unaware of?
Statistical correction of the
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If she copied and pasted that would be an improvement. She often introduces spelling, grammatical or factual errors that aren't in the original article.
Biased is a feature! (Score:2, Insightful)
A hiring system should be biased by definition. Biased to the best candidates. If not, you are doing it wrong.
Not a fix for diveristy (Score:2, Insightful)
There is no way that AI in the hiring process will fix the 'diversity problem.' Mainly because the problem largely doesn't exist and is mostly PC-thuggary.
I never hear about the diversity problem in nursing or preschool school teachers where men are effectively absent from the workforce, or how women want diversity in construction jobs or automotive repair.
The sexes are different. The races are different. The cultures are different. You will not get a equal mix of them.
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Besides which, all the "skills" and "requirements" HR has are bullshit. There's a century of research on it, thousands of studies. The only things that matter in predicting job performance are:
1. IQ
2. integrity (adds about 25% to IQ predictive validity)
-both easily, quickly and cheaply testable. Adding other requirements adds very little, and then only for work sample and "structured interviews" (which are nothing like regular interviews, it amounts to administering certain IQ tests in person) and these co
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I never hear about the diversity problem in nursing or preschool school teachers where men are effectively absent from the workforce, or how women want diversity in construction jobs or automotive repair.
Only because you don't listen.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/edu... [bbc.co.uk]
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]
https://www.womeninconstructio... [womenincon...summit.com]
http://womeninautomotive.com/ [womeninautomotive.com]
etc.
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so I need list each skill 2-3+ different ways (Score:2)
so I need list each skill 2-3+ different ways and maybe even list stuff like
software used just to list windows 95 you may need to put down.
Windows
Windows 9X
Windows 95
Win 9X
Win 95
Win95
Windows 4
(not even listing all of the OSR updates)
I one did an online job application with Comcast and they wanted me to fill out this really big skills matrix that was a little like that.
With some very generic tiles.
Software listed more then one for the same thing.
The same basic skill worded 2-3 different ways.
In house terms.
Remove HR level resume weeding (Score:2)
It doesn't really change anything, as the HR level stuff is pretty much mindless and arbitrary.
And for people thinking this will remove bias... who do you think is going to be giving the program its parameters?
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What happens when your 5-10+ page resume (Score:2)
What happens when your 5-10+ page resume get's kicked out by an real person? after you needed one to list all of the skilled needed to get past the bot?
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You send two resumes, or you put the long form skill list in 1 pt white on white in the margins.
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You still need a 1 pager. The long form one comes later.
Before you resume gets to the person that might be interested, it has to get past the HR drones, who wouldn't understand the details even if they weren't THAT lazy.
The problem with hiring is (Score:2)
The initial filtering should be done by an individual with the knowledge and skills they are hiring for. In 10 mins you know what the lay of the land is. But that is only done in small businesses and is not how the corporate or government world works.
As a self employed contract programmer I have not been asked for a resume in 15+ years. I do not advertise, use the web to
Oh good lord (Score:3)
ai is already biased (Score:2)
They'll get what they asked for. (Score:3)
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Those firms just get you to change your employer descriptions from "I did this, that and a bit of twiddly stuff" to using buzzwords "Achieved", "Led", "Successfully", "Developed new", and all that high-achiever keyword things.
Volume (Score:2)
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Sweet! (Score:2)
School being something you can't discriminate on? (Score:1)
What training data? (Score:2)
Its almost impossible to come up with well defined performance evaluation criteria for many jobs. Lines of code per day? Bugs found??? Papers published? How can you even produce a a training data set where former employees performance is rated.
If humans do that evaluation, then whatever bias the humans had will just be trained into the algorithm.
If you are hiring factory workers, you might be able to measure productivity or error rate or something, but that seems fraught with running afoul of age discrim
Unbiased Utopia (Score:2)
Didn't Northpoint promise that for the parole/correction software?
https://www.propublica.org/art... [propublica.org]
To quote the brilliant John McKittrick... (Score:1)
"bias" is a terrible, terrible word (Score:2)
A bias-free human being is like a coffee table, where, when you spill water, the water stays exactly where it first lands: it doesn't preferentially dribble down one side, or pool in an (almost) invisible declivity, or find itself attracted by surface tension to a sticky area.
Do you own such a coffee table? I don't. But I consider mine flat enough. My mugs don't rock, and I don't even need a soft coaster to achieve this. But my soup does ride a little higher at one end of the bowl, so perhaps what I need i
How could you tell the difference? (Score:2)
I mean, some idiot HR deps - sorry, I repeat myself - use DATABASE SEARCHES to find "qualified" candidates. NONE of them have any idea of what the requirements are, or what translates.
And no, this isn't new: the last time I was looking, in '09, Grumman was doing just that. You may be wonderful, but if you don't have the right acronyms in the right order, they're not going to even look at you.
Different from Keyword-matching? (Score:2)
Having just escaped from job-hunting hell, I can say that the keyword-matching tricks you have to jump through are a real pain in the ass. There were several jobs that I knew I could do where my keyword-match score probably excluded me. The flip side is that many role descriptions are written by hiring managers (or the hiring manager from years back) and they are frequently not relevant to the role. I am a hiring manager and I write my own job descriptions fresh for each role that I'm hiring for and I valid
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Plus, anyone with a lengthy work history--which experienced people tend to hide (to avoid age discrimination) by keeping the resume to 1-2 pages--winds up getting locked out of some positions because they have a.) applicable experience that's too old to put on a chronological resume kept to the short length preferred by HR or b.) experience that they have--but is edited out in the name of brevity--that addresses the so-called "soft" skills that employers are screaming about nowadays but are difficult to describe in the short resumes that recruiters are willing to read. Anything is an improvement over the current situation.
As someone who has over 35 years of experience as a developer/project lead/manager I could put way more than 2 pages on my resume. But as a hiring manager, I expect your resume to get to the point, and I don't want to wade through 6 pages about your experiences with CICS and Fortran-77 when what I want to know is about things relevant to developing RESTful services in Java on Linux systems. Experience from 20 years ago may be relevant, but you get in the situation where a jack of all trades with 3 years o
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You should have written a 'long form, machine readable' resume years ago. Just to be processed by HR morons, it needs to be a long list of keywords.
The alternative is to include the keyword list in the margins in 1 pt white on white text.
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