Jorge Sanz

h-index10
2papers

2 Papers

LGJan 21, 2025
Adaptive PII Mitigation Framework for Large Language Models

Shubhi Asthana, Ruchi Mahindru, Bing Zhang et al.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) faces growing challenges from evolving data protection laws and enforcement practices worldwide. Regulations like GDPR and CCPA impose strict compliance requirements on Machine Learning (ML) models, especially concerning personal data use. These laws grant individuals rights such as data correction and deletion, complicating the training and deployment of Large Language Models (LLMs) that rely on extensive datasets. Public data availability does not guarantee its lawful use for ML, amplifying these challenges. This paper introduces an adaptive system for mitigating risk of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and Sensitive Personal Information (SPI) in LLMs. It dynamically aligns with diverse regulatory frameworks and integrates seamlessly into Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) systems. The system uses advanced NLP techniques, context-aware analysis, and policy-driven masking to ensure regulatory compliance. Benchmarks highlight the system's effectiveness, with an F1 score of 0.95 for Passport Numbers, outperforming tools like Microsoft Presidio (0.33) and Amazon Comprehend (0.54). In human evaluations, the system achieved an average user trust score of 4.6/5, with participants acknowledging its accuracy and transparency. Observations demonstrate stricter anonymization under GDPR compared to CCPA, which permits pseudonymization and user opt-outs. These results validate the system as a scalable and robust solution for enterprise privacy compliance.

LGNov 5, 2018
Theoretical and Experimental Analysis on the Generalizability of Distribution Regression Network

Connie Kou, Hwee Kuan Lee, Jorge Sanz et al.

There is emerging interest in performing regression between distributions. In contrast to prediction on single instances, these machine learning methods can be useful for population-based studies or on problems that are inherently statistical in nature. The recently proposed distribution regression network (DRN) has shown superior performance for the distribution-to-distribution regression task compared to conventional neural networks. However, in Kou et al. (2018) and some other works on distribution regression, there is a lack of comprehensive comparative study on both theoretical basis and generalization abilities of the methods. We derive some mathematical properties of DRN and qualitatively compare it to conventional neural networks. We also perform comprehensive experiments to study the generalizability of distribution regression models, by studying their robustness to limited training data, data sampling noise and task difficulty. DRN consistently outperforms conventional neural networks, requiring fewer training data and maintaining robust performance with noise. Furthermore, the theoretical properties of DRN can be used to provide some explanation on the ability of DRN to achieve better generalization performance than conventional neural networks.