Hollywood studios get in trouble for a lack of diversity in their casting decisions. In order to remedy that,

they create a computational model to find promising new actors. The computational model compares
prospective actors to famous ones and chooses prospective actors that are the most similar to famous
ones. What is a true statement about this computational model? (1 point)

While it would help eliminate bias from casting decisions, it is inefficient because it would be quicker for
humans to choose the applicants.

It is not a good idea to use computational models in the casting process as computers often deviate from
the equations they're given.

Though it will choose from the applicants quicker than humans could, it will repeat the biases of the
original casting decisions.

It will be effective and efficient at eliminating bias from casting decisions because computers are more
objective than people.

1 answer

The true statement about the computational model is:

Though it will choose from the applicants quicker than humans could, it will repeat the biases of the original casting decisions.

This is true because if the model is trained on data from past casting decisions that reflect existing biases, it will likely replicate those biases when selecting new actors, rather than eliminating them.