Abstract:In this paper we revisit the classical problem of nonparametric regression, but impose local differential privacy constraints. Under such constraints, the raw data $(X_1,Y_1),\ldots,(X_n,Y_n)$, taking values in $\mathbb{R}^d \times \mathbb{R}$, cannot be directly observed, and all estimators are functions of the randomised output from a suitable privacy mechanism. The statistician is free to choose the form of the privacy mechanism, and here we add Laplace distributed noise to a discretisation of the location of a feature vector $X_i$ and to the value of its response variable $Y_i$. Based on this randomised data, we design a novel estimator of the regression function, which can be viewed as a privatised version of the well-studied partitioning regression estimator. The main result is that the estimator is strongly universally consistent. Our methods and analysis also give rise to a strongly universally consistent binary classification rule for locally differentially private data.
Abstract:We consider the binary classification problem in a setup that preserves the privacy of the original sample. We provide a privacy mechanism that is locally differentially private and then construct a classifier based on the private sample that is universally consistent in Euclidean spaces. Under stronger assumptions, we establish the minimax rates of convergence of the excess risk and see that they are slower than in the case when the original sample is available.