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42 Admin. & Reg. L. News 7 (2016-2017)
Improving the Administrative State with Machine Learning

handle is hein.journals/admreln42 and id is 137 raw text is: 



8. The Federal government should
   partner with the industry to
   ensure that connected vehicles
   are sufficiently protected from
   hacking and cyber attacks.
9. The Federal government should
   partner with the industry to
   determine how to do the


   inter-manufacturer testing that
   will be necessary for market
   certification.
10. The Federal government needs to
   spec a uniform method for emer-
   gency services to stop or disable
   an automated vehicle.


  There are far more than these
ten things to do, but we can all
start working on these things now.
Through  every step of the process,
manufacturers should work closely
with government  to ensure that the
process will actually work, without
having to take steps backward.


Improving the Administrative


State with Machine Learning

Cary  Coglianese*  &  David  Lehr**


Machine learning refers   to
       computer algorithms that, on
       their own, discover patterns
in historical datasets, which can then
be used for making predictions. Such
algorithms undergird important inno-
vations throughout the private sector,
making possible high-frequency
trading, online video and retail recom-
mendations, and self-driving cars,
among  other applications. A prolif-
eration of seemingly autonomous
decision-making tools has raised alarms
over the potential loss of human auton-
omy. Particularly when government
agencies begin to rely more extensively
on machine-learning algorithms to
support decisions previously made
by human  officials, the wisdom and
legality of machine learning will likely
come under increased attention. Can
agencies use artificial intelligence while
remaining faithful to principles of law
and consonant with government of
the people and by the people?
  The answer is basically yes.
Administrative agencies have numer-
ous opportunities to improve their
operations through the responsible
application of machine-learning
technology. Contrary to growing

* Edward B. Shils Professor of Law and
Professor of Political Science, University of
Pennsylvania Law School; Director, Penn
Program on Regulation.
** Research Fellow, Georgetown University
Law Center; Research Affiliate, Penn Program
on Regulation;J.D. Candidate,Yale Law
School, 2020.


alarmism, governments can actually
use algorithms in important ways
without contravening constitutional
and administrative law doctrines. We
have recently offered an extensive legal
analysis of government use of machine-
learning algorithms in our article,
Regulating by Robot: Administrative
Decision Making in the Machine-Learning
Era, 105 GEO. L.J. 1147 (2017). Here
we highlight what machine learning
promises government agencies and why
standard doctrines should not form
insuperable barriers to governmental
use of machine-learning algorithms.

Machine Learning's
Administrative Promise
  At an intuitive level, machine-
learning algorithms are those that
learn from the data. But what
does this really mean? It means
these algorithms find patterns or
correlations between variables in a
set of data, which can then be used to
make  predictions. Importantly, this
discovery is done on the algorithms'
own; humans  do not explicitly
program them  to look for certain
patterns. As a result, it can be difficult
to explain exactly how or why a
machine-learning algorithm keys
in on certain correlations or makes
the predictions that it does. In other
words, machine-learning algorithms
are often considered black boxes.
  Furthermore, and in contrast
with some conventional techniques
like regression analysis, machine


Summer  20177


learning is not used to support causal
inferences about the learned relation-
ships between different variables.
Nevertheless, just as machine learning
is leading private-sector improvements,
its ability to make sense of large quan-
tities of data can help agency officials
make smarter decisions, allocate scarce
administrative resources more wisely,
and improve the accuracy and fairness
of governmental processes.
  Government   agencies are already
exploring how to use machine learn-
ing. The Environmental Protection
Agency  (EPA) has used machine
learning to forecast chemical toxic-
ity. The Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) prioritizes audits based on
machine-learning predictions of
tax violations. The Securities and
Exchange  Commission  (SEC)
similarly relies on machine learning
to identify potential instances of
insider trading. These are just a few
examples, but they show that agen-
cies are already embracing artificial
intelligence.
  That said, current administrative
applications are limited. Many of
these applications assist with discre-
tionary aspects of enforcement, such
as deciding which facilities to inspect.
These existing uses are unlikely to
be problematic from the standpoint
of administrative law because they
involve algorithms as decision-
support tools to inform actions that
are committed to agency discretion.
But in the future, federal agencies


Administrative & Regulatory Law News


Summer  2017

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