Quan Yuan (Zhejiang University), Xiaochen Li (University of North Carolina at Greensboro), Linkang Du (Xi'an Jiaotong University), Min Chen (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Mingyang Sun (Peking University), Yunjun Gao (Zhejiang University), Shibo He (Zhejiang University), Jiming Chen (Zhejiang University), Zhikun Zhang (Zhejiang University)

Causal inference plays a crucial role in scientific research across multiple disciplines. Estimating causal effects, particularly the average treatment effect (ATE), from observational data has garnered significant attention. However, computing the ATE from real-world observational data poses substantial privacy risks to users. Differential privacy, which offers strict theoretical guarantees, has emerged as a standard approach for privacy-preserving data analysis. However, existing differentially private ATE estimation works rely on specific assumptions, provide limited privacy protection, or fail to offer comprehensive information protection.

To this end, we introduce PrivATE, a practical ATE estimation framework that ensures differential privacy. In fact, various scenarios require varying levels of privacy protection. For example, only test scores are generally sensitive information in education evaluation, while all types of medical record data are usually private. To accommodate different privacy requirements, we design two levels (i.e., label-level and sample-level) of privacy protection in PrivATE. By deriving an adaptive matching limit, PrivATE effectively balances noise-induced error and matching error, leading to a more accurate estimate of ATE. Our evaluation validates the effectiveness of PrivATE. PrivATE outperforms the baselines on all datasets and privacy budgets.

View More Papers

FlyTrap: Physical Distance-Pulling Attack Towards Camera-based Autonomous Target Tracking...

Shaoyuan Xie (University of California, Irvine), Mohamad Habib Fakih (University of California, Irvine), Junchi Lu (University of California, Irvine), Fayzah Alshammari (University of California, Irvine), Ningfei Wang (University of California, Irvine), Takami Sato (University of California, Irvine), Halima Bouzidi (University of California Irvine), Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque (University of California, Irvine), Qi Alfred Chen (University…

Read More

Decompiling the Synergy: An Empirical Study of Human–LLM Teaming...

Zion Leonahenahe Basque (Arizona State University), Samuele Doria (University of Padua), Ananta Soneji (Arizona State University), Wil Gibbs (Arizona State University), Adam Doupe (Arizona State University), Yan Shoshitaishvili (Arizona State University), Eleonora Losiouk (University of Padua), Ruoyu “Fish” Wang (Arizona State University), Simone Aonzo (EURECOM)

Read More