FLIPHAT: Joint Differential Privacy for High Dimensional Sparse Linear Bandits
This addresses privacy concerns in sequential decision-making applications like personalized medicine, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods for private bandits.
The paper tackles the problem of ensuring joint differential privacy in high-dimensional sparse linear bandits, where both rewards and contexts are private, by proposing the FLIPHAT algorithm, which achieves optimal regret up to factors in sparsity and logarithmic terms in dimension.
High dimensional sparse linear bandits serve as an efficient model for sequential decision-making problems (e.g. personalized medicine), where high dimensional features (e.g. genomic data) on the users are available, but only a small subset of them are relevant. Motivated by data privacy concerns in these applications, we study the joint differentially private high dimensional sparse linear bandits, where both rewards and contexts are considered as private data. First, to quantify the cost of privacy, we derive a lower bound on the regret achievable in this setting. To further address the problem, we design a computationally efficient bandit algorithm, \textbf{F}orgetfu\textbf{L} \textbf{I}terative \textbf{P}rivate \textbf{HA}rd \textbf{T}hresholding (FLIPHAT). Along with doubling of episodes and episodic forgetting, FLIPHAT deploys a variant of Noisy Iterative Hard Thresholding (N-IHT) algorithm as a sparse linear regression oracle to ensure both privacy and regret-optimality. We show that FLIPHAT achieves optimal regret in terms of privacy parameters $ε, δ$, context dimension $d$, and time horizon $T$ up to a linear factor in model sparsity and logarithmic factor in $d$. We analyze the regret by providing a novel refined analysis of the estimation error of N-IHT, which is of parallel interest.