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Privacy Preserving Data Analysis in Mental Health Research

This document discusses the design of incentive compatible privacy-preserving data analysis techniques. It notes that while current techniques guarantee privacy of input data, they cannot prevent parties from modifying private inputs unless proper incentives are set. The paper aims to analyze important privacy-preserving data analysis tasks in a way that provides incentives for parties to provide truthful inputs by developing key theorems.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views1 page

Privacy Preserving Data Analysis in Mental Health Research

This document discusses the design of incentive compatible privacy-preserving data analysis techniques. It notes that while current techniques guarantee privacy of input data, they cannot prevent parties from modifying private inputs unless proper incentives are set. The paper aims to analyze important privacy-preserving data analysis tasks in a way that provides incentives for parties to provide truthful inputs by developing key theorems.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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2020 – 2021

Privacy Preserving Data Analysis in Mental Health Research

Abstract:
In many cases, competing parties who have private data may collaboratively conduct
privacy-preserving distributed data analysis (PPDA) tasks to learn beneficial data
models or analysis results. Most often, the competing parties have different incentives.
Although certain PPDA techniques guarantee that nothing other than the final analysis
result is revealed, it is impossible to verify whether participating parties are truthful about
their private input data. Unless proper incentives are set, current PPDA techniques
cannot prevent participating parties from modifying their private inputs.incentive
compatible privacy-preserving data analysis techniques This raises the question of how
to design incentive compatible privacy-preserving data analysis techniques that motivate
participating parties to provide truthful inputs. In this paper, we first develop key
theorems, then base on these theorems, we analyze certain important privacy-
preserving data analysis tasks that could be conducted in a way that telling the truth is
the best choice for any participating party.

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