Archimedes Meets Privacy: On Privately Estimating Quantiles in High Dimensions Under Minimal Assumptions

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Publication:6407940

arXiv2208.07438MaRDI QIDQ6407940FDOQ6407940


Authors: Omri Ben-Eliezer, Dan Mikulincer, Ilias Zadik Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 15 August 2022

Abstract: The last few years have seen a surge of work on high dimensional statistics under privacy constraints, mostly following two main lines of work: the ``worst case line, which does not make any distributional assumptions on the input data; and the ``strong assumptions line, which assumes that the data is generated from specific families, e.g., subgaussian distributions. In this work we take a middle ground, obtaining new differentially private algorithms with polynomial sample complexity for estimating quantiles in high-dimensions, as well as estimating and sampling points of high Tukey depth, all working under very mild distributional assumptions. From the technical perspective, our work relies upon deep robustness results in the convex geometry literature, demonstrating how such results can be used in a private context. Our main object of interest is the (convex) floating body (FB), a notion going back to Archimedes, which is a robust and well studied high-dimensional analogue of the interquantile range. We show how one can privately, and with polynomially many samples, (a) output an approximate interior point of the FB -- e.g., ``a typical user in a high-dimensional database -- by leveraging the robustness of the Steiner point of the FB; and at the expense of polynomially many more samples, (b) produce an approximate uniform sample from the FB, by constructing a private noisy projection oracle.













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