Private and Communication-Efficient Algorithms for Entropy Estimation
This work addresses privacy and communication bottlenecks for users in distributed statistical estimation, offering incremental improvements over existing algorithms.
The paper tackles the problem of estimating entropy measures (Shannon, Gini, collision) in distributed settings with privacy and communication constraints, achieving constant communication cost, local differential privacy, and improved sample complexities such as linear scaling for tree-structured distributions compared to prior quadratic requirements.
Modern statistical estimation is often performed in a distributed setting where each sample belongs to a single user who shares their data with a central server. Users are typically concerned with preserving the privacy of their samples, and also with minimizing the amount of data they must transmit to the server. We give improved private and communication-efficient algorithms for estimating several popular measures of the entropy of a distribution. All of our algorithms have constant communication cost and satisfy local differential privacy. For a joint distribution over many variables whose conditional independence is given by a tree, we describe algorithms for estimating Shannon entropy that require a number of samples that is linear in the number of variables, compared to the quadratic sample complexity of prior work. We also describe an algorithm for estimating Gini entropy whose sample complexity has no dependence on the support size of the distribution and can be implemented using a single round of concurrent communication between the users and the server. In contrast, the previously best-known algorithm has high communication cost and requires the server to facilitate interaction between the users. Finally, we describe an algorithm for estimating collision entropy that generalizes the best known algorithm to the private and communication-efficient setting.