Abdulkadir Korkmaz

h-index3
2papers

2 Papers

CRJan 22, 2025
A Selective Homomorphic Encryption Approach for Faster Privacy-Preserving Federated Learning

Abdulkadir Korkmaz, Praveen Rao

Federated learning (FL) has come forward as a critical approach for privacy-preserving machine learning in healthcare, allowing collaborative model training across decentralized medical datasets without exchanging clients' data. However, current security implementations for these systems face a fundamental trade-off: rigorous cryptographic protections like fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) impose prohibitive computational overhead, while lightweight alternatives risk vulnerable data leakage through model updates. To address this issue, we present FAS (Fast and Secure Federated Learning), a novel approach that strategically combines selective homomorphic encryption, differential privacy, and bitwise scrambling to achieve robust security without compromising practical usability. Our approach eliminates the need for model pretraining phases while dynamically protecting high-risk model parameters through layered encryption and obfuscation. We implemented FAS using the Flower framework and evaluated it on a cluster of eleven physical machines. Our approach was up to 90\% faster than applying FHE on the model weights. In addition, we eliminated the computational overhead that is required by competitors such as FedML-HE and MaskCrypt. Our approach was up to 1.5$\times$ faster than the competitors while achieving comparable security results. Experimental evaluations on medical imaging datasets confirm that FAS maintains similar security results to conventional FHE against gradient inversion attacks while preserving diagnostic model accuracy. These results position FAS as a practical solution for latency-sensitive healthcare applications where both privacy preservation and computational efficiency are requirements.

HCJun 24, 2025
HARPT: A Corpus for Analyzing Consumers' Trust and Privacy Concerns in Electronic Health Apps

Timoteo Kelly, Abdulkadir Korkmaz, Samuel Mallet et al.

We present Health App Reviews for Privacy & Trust (HARPT), a large-scale annotated corpus of user reviews from Electronic Health (eHealth) applications (apps) aimed at advancing research in user privacy and trust. The dataset comprises 480K user reviews labeled in seven categories that capture critical aspects of trust in applications (TA), trust in providers (TP), and privacy concerns (PC). Our multistage strategy integrated keyword-based filtering, iterative manual labeling with review, targeted data augmentation, and weak supervision using transformer-based classifiers. In parallel, we manually annotated a curated subset of 7,000 reviews to support the development and evaluation of machine learning models. We benchmarked a broad range of models, providing a baseline for future work. HARPT is released under an open resource license to support reproducible research in usable privacy and trust in digital libraries and health informatics.