Data dissemination and disclosure limitation in a world without microdata: a risk-utility framework for remote access analysis servers
DOI10.1214/088342305000000043zbMATH Open1088.62142OpenAlexW2145709897MaRDI QIDQ819963FDOQ819963
Authors: S. Gomatam, Alan F. Karr, Jerome P. Reiter, Ashish P. Sanil
Publication date: 4 April 2006
Published in: Statistical Science (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1214/088342305000000043
Recommendations
- Disclosure-protected inference using generalised linear models
- Verification servers: enabling analysts to assess the quality of inferences from public use data
- Statistical disclosure risk: separating potential and harm
- Estimating Risks of Identification Disclosure in Microdata
- A Measure of Disclosure Risk for Microdata
Linear regression; mixed models (62J05) Applications of statistics (62P99) Computing methodologies and applications (68U99)
Cites Work
- Releasing Multiply Imputed, Synthetic Public use Microdata: An Illustration and Empirical Study
- Elements of statistical disclosure control
- Semidefinite Programming
- Semidefinite optimization
- Exchangeability and Data Analysis
- Statistical disclosure control in practice
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Data-swapping: A technique for disclosure control
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- SOFTWARE SYSTEMS FOR TABULAR DATA RELEASES
- Categorical data regression diagnostics for remote access servers
Cited In (13)
- Verification servers: enabling analysts to assess the quality of inferences from public use data
- Using multiple imputation to integrate and disseminate confidential microdata
- Privacy-preserving and homogeneity-pursuit integrative analysis for high-dimensional censored data
- Masking methods that preserve positivity constraints in microdata
- Data quality: a statistical perspective
- MODELLING USER UNCERTAINTY FOR DISCLOSURE RISK AND DATA UTILITY
- Differentially Private Significance Tests for Regression Coefficients
- SOFTWARE SYSTEMS FOR TABULAR DATA RELEASES
- Perturbed robust linear estimating equations for confidentiality protection in remote analysis
- Multiple imputation for sharing precise geographies in public use data
- Combined analysis of correlated data when data cannot be pooled
- Development and prospects on provision of microdata of official statistics-based on experiences at Hitotsubashi University
- Categorical data regression diagnostics for remote access servers
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