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Comparative Study of Differentially Private Synthetic Data Algorithms from the NIST PSCR Differential Privacy Synthetic Data Challenge
Author(s) -
Claire McKay Bowen,
Joshua Snoke
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of privacy and confidentiality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2575-8527
DOI - 10.29012/jpc.748
Subject(s) - differential privacy , nist , computer science , synthetic data , usability , data quality , data mining , strengths and weaknesses , algorithm , data science , information privacy , computer security , engineering , metric (unit) , philosophy , operations management , epistemology , human–computer interaction , natural language processing
Differentially private synthetic data generation offers a recent solution to release analytically useful data while preserving the privacy of individuals in the data. In order to utilize these algorithms for public policy decisions, policymakers need an accurate understanding of these algorithms' comparative performance. Correspondingly, data practitioners also require standard metrics for evaluating the analytic qualities of the synthetic data. In this paper, we present an in-depth evaluation of several differentially private synthetic data algorithms using actual differentially private synthetic data sets created by contestants in the recent National Institute of Standards and Technology Public Safety Communications Research (NIST PSCR) Division's "Differential Privacy Synthetic Data Challenge." We offer analyses of these algorithms based on both the accuracy of the data they create and their usability by potential data providers. We frame the methods used in the NIST PSCR data challenge within the broader differentially private synthetic data literature. We implement additional utility metrics, including two of our own, on the differentially private synthetic data and compare mechanism utility on three categories. Our comparative assessment of the differentially private data synthesis methods and the quality metrics shows the relative usefulness, general strengths and weaknesses, preferred choices of algorithms and metrics. Finally we describe the implications of our evaluation for policymakers seeking to implement differentially private synthetic data algorithms on future data products.

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