Abstract
Privacy-preserving data analysis is a rising challenge in contemporary statistics, as the privacy guarantees of statistical methods are often achieved at the expense of accuracy. In this paper, we investigate the tradeoff between statistical accuracy and privacy in mean estimation and linear regression, under both the classical low-dimensional and modern high-dimensional settings. A primary focus is to establish minimax optimality for statistical estimation with the -differential privacy constraint. By refining the “tracing adversary” technique for lower bounds in the theoretical computer science literature, we improve existing minimax lower bound for low-dimensional mean estimation and establish new lower bounds for high-dimensional mean estimation and linear regression problems. We also design differentially private algorithms that attain the minimax lower bounds up to logarithmic factors. In particular, for high-dimensional linear regression, a novel private iterative hard thresholding algorithm is proposed. The numerical performance of differentially private algorithms is demonstrated by simulation studies and applications to real data sets.
Funding Statement
The research of T. Cai was supported in part by NSF Grants DMS-1712735 and DMS-2015259 and NIH Grants R01-GM129781 and R01-GM123056. The research of L. Zhang was supported in part by NSF Grant NSF DMS-2015378.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the Associate Editor and referees for their helpful suggestions and comments that lead to a great improvement of the paper. We also thank Chi-Yun Wu for advice on Section 6.
Citation
T. Tony Cai. Yichen Wang. Linjun Zhang. "The cost of privacy: Optimal rates of convergence for parameter estimation with differential privacy." Ann. Statist. 49 (5) 2825 - 2850, October 2021. https://doi.org/10.1214/21-AOS2058
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