Tag Archives: geography

Tim Unwin: Profiling an ICT4D Heavyweight

Although our class has read many things this man has written, used his concepts to develop an understanding of what ICT4D is, and grown to talk about him like a Tulane Professor, before researching for this post I knew very little about Tim Unwin (@timunwin).

Tim Unwin @timunwin

As it turns out this now big name in ICT4D started his academic career as a geography professor with a love for wine. His early works focused mainly on geography, some even being about wine ( “Wine and the Vine” ), but for the past decade or so his focus has shifted to the world of ICT4D. His recent research has focused on helping out of school youth and the disabled in the developing world, specifically how ICTs can be used to do so.

Currently holding title as Secretary General of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO), Chair of the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission in the UK, and Emeritus Professor of Geography and UNESCO Chair in ICT4D at Royal Holloway, University of London. His previous titles are also impressive and exhaustive.

His views and experience come across in his blog, so to leave you with a few words of wisdom from the man himself:

“Try not to worry about things over which you have little control; concentrate on those things about which you can have the most significant effect.”

-Tim Unwin


Micro-Bias: New Study reveals Implicit Bias in Kiva Loans

Micro lending websites, such as Kiva.org, are a newly emerging tool that allow people to send money to people in developing countries. Kiva’s purpose has been summarized in an earlier blog post. However, the problem of potential bias has not yet been addressed in this blog.

According to an analysis released by researchers at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, lenders on Kiva tend to favor attractive, light-skinned females. This is made possible by the profiles created on the site, which feature a picture of the person who is asking for aid. Internet users are able to browse through profiles on the website and search based on country or type of project. The researchers in the study found that in order to get money more quickly, “it is better to be pretty than ugly, female than male, skinny than fat, and, yes, light skinned-than dark-skinned.” The study used a skin color scale taken from research on bias against new immigrants. Conclusive evidence was found that light-skinned borrowers received money faster, and being attractive didn’t hurt.

Walter Theseira, Assistant Professor at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Walter Theseira, the lead author of the study, comments:

“This is why [NGOs] spend so much time choosing just the right photographs to illicit donations… why people do that… it’s a bit hard to say. Our hypothesis is that this is probably more a form of implicit discrimination than people acting on explicit bias.”

Interestingly, being from Africa helps when receiving loans. Loans to Kenya fund much faster than loans to Bulgaria. This geographic discrimination has been found to be much more influential than skin tone because many users believe that there is more need in poorer countries, which fits Africa’s stereotype. Some lenders also believe that their dollars will go farther in Africa than in other countries.

Researchers worry that “baked-in-bias in peer-to-peer choices could undermine the very idea of a financial solution to unfairness.” This bias is seen in other studies. For example, subconscious bias appears in a Stanford study that found that online shoppers were less trusting of an ipod for sale if the hand in the picture was black. Another study from Wharton found that black borrowers on Prosper.com were up to 35% less likely to get a loan at a similar interest rate when compared to white borrowers. Prosper responded to this by eliminating user photos.

Prosper.com Review from P2P Lending News

One of the interesting elements of Kiva is the personal feel to it. By looking at a picture of a person in a different country, you get a sense of personal connection. You almost feel like you know them, that you could shake their hand after providing aid. Eliminating profile pictures may be a way to combat implicit bias, but it will eliminate this personal aspect of Kiva. This may hurt participation rates as people in developing countries search for new visual stimulation.

An important implication of this study is that online crowdfunding, microfinance, and lending websites need academic examination. The big question now is what the sites can do to fix the problem. Theseira suggests that the solution lies in regular Kiva users:

“What we found [on Kiva] are these patterns of discrimination are most evident in people who don’t lend much…In the case of the Kiva website itself, I think if we can try to establish more clearly whether it’s implicit discrimination or something else, it might be possible to use technology to address it.”

Theseira believes that those who habitually use Kiva are more strategic, businesslike, and less biased. These repeat users are interested in details that are relevant to loan-worthiness rather than irrelevant details such as attractiveness. His suggestion is to present a set of profile designed for newer users to counteract measured biases. Theseira also suggests that offering fewer choices or designign elements of the site to slow the decision-making process could help with users who feel overwhelmed by choices.

Theseira, like many academics in the field, is hungry for more information about why people prefer to fund light skinned, attractive people. Current research is at the tip of the iceberg. Theseira has expanded his research to myc4.com, a European lending site where investors earn interest. This will help to better understand the incentives behind the decisions made when lending.

“You can lend directly to a small business in Africa”

Kiva’s leaders have been “admirably open” about the problem of biases and are eager to innovate ways to avoid micro-discrimination in regards to geography, industry, and male-female bias. With new information and published studies, hopefully these biases can be buried.