CVAICRLGNov 4, 2024

Differentially Private Integrated Decision Gradients (IDG-DP) for Radar-based Human Activity Recognition

arXiv:2411.02099v24 citationsh-index: 25WACV
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy concerns in healthcare monitoring using radar sensing, representing an incremental improvement in balancing utility and protection against specific attacks.

The study tackled privacy vulnerabilities in radar-based human activity recognition systems by proposing a novel differential privacy method using integrated decision gradients, which effectively mitigated membership inference attacks while maintaining utility across various settings.

Human motion analysis offers significant potential for healthcare monitoring and early detection of diseases. The advent of radar-based sensing systems has captured the spotlight for they are able to operate without physical contact and they can integrate with pre-existing Wi-Fi networks. They are also seen as less privacy-invasive compared to camera-based systems. However, recent research has shown high accuracy in recognizing subjects or gender from radar gait patterns, raising privacy concerns. This study addresses these issues by investigating privacy vulnerabilities in radar-based Human Activity Recognition (HAR) systems and proposing a novel method for privacy preservation using Differential Privacy (DP) driven by attributions derived with Integrated Decision Gradient (IDG) algorithm. We investigate Black-box Membership Inference Attack (MIA) Models in HAR settings across various levels of attacker-accessible information. We extensively evaluated the effectiveness of the proposed IDG-DP method by designing a CNN-based HAR model and rigorously assessing its resilience against MIAs. Experimental results demonstrate the potential of IDG-DP in mitigating privacy attacks while maintaining utility across all settings, particularly excelling against label-only and shadow model black-box MIA attacks. This work represents a crucial step towards balancing the need for effective radar-based HAR with robust privacy protection in healthcare environments.

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