Miran Kim

2papers

2 Papers

CRApr 19, 2021
Secure Human Action Recognition by Encrypted Neural Network Inference

Miran Kim, Xiaoqian Jiang, Kristin Lauter et al.

Advanced computer vision technology can provide near real-time home monitoring to support "aging in place" by detecting falls and symptoms related to seizures and stroke. Affordable webcams, together with cloud computing services (to run machine learning algorithms), can potentially bring significant social benefits. However, it has not been deployed in practice because of privacy concerns. In this paper, we propose a strategy that uses homomorphic encryption to resolve this dilemma, which guarantees information confidentiality while retaining action detection. Our protocol for secure inference can distinguish falls from activities of daily living with 86.21% sensitivity and 99.14% specificity, with an average inference latency of 1.2 seconds and 2.4 seconds on real-world test datasets using small and large neural nets, respectively. We show that our method enables a 613x speedup over the latency-optimized LoLa and achieves an average of 3.1x throughput increase in secure inference compared to the throughput-optimized nGraph-HE2.

CRMay 22, 2020
Secure and Differentially Private Bayesian Learning on Distributed Data

Yeongjae Gil, Xiaoqian Jiang, Miran Kim et al.

Data integration and sharing maximally enhance the potential for novel and meaningful discoveries. However, it is a non-trivial task as integrating data from multiple sources can put sensitive information of study participants at risk. To address the privacy concern, we present a distributed Bayesian learning approach via Preconditioned Stochastic Gradient Langevin Dynamics with RMSprop, which combines differential privacy and homomorphic encryption in a harmonious manner while protecting private information. We applied the proposed secure and privacy-preserving distributed Bayesian learning approach to logistic regression and survival analysis on distributed data, and demonstrated its feasibility in terms of prediction accuracy and time complexity, compared to the centralized approach.