Fairness-Sensitive PageRank Approximation
Abstract
Real-world social networks have structural inequalities, including the majority and minorities, and fairness-agnostic centrality measures often amplify these inequalities by disproportionately favoring majority nodes. Fairness-Sensitive PageRank aims to balance algorithmic influence across structurally and demographically diverse groups while preserving the link-based relevance of classical PageRank. However, existing formulations require solving constrained matrix inversions that scale poorly with network size. In this work, we develop an efficient mean-field approximation for Fairness-Sensitive PageRank (FSPR) that enforces group-level fairness through an estimated teleportation (jump) vector, thereby avoiding the costly matrix inversion and iterative optimization. We derive a closed-form approximation of FSPR using the in-degree and group label of nodes, along with the global group proportion. We further analyze intra-class fluctuations by deriving expressions for the variance of approximated FSPR scores. Empirical results on real-world networks demonstrate that the proposed approximation efficiently estimates the FSPR while reducing runtime by an order of magnitude, enabling fairness-constrained ranking at scale.
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