| Stanley L. Warner. Randomized Response: A Survey Technique for Eliminating Evasive Answer Bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 60(309):63--69, March 1965. A Security of Modified Oblivious Transfer Protocol From our oblivious transfer protocol |
....among the interviewees an undesirable requirement in the real life. In this dissertation, we have developed a method (the data perturbation technique) that can support such a type of privacy preserving survey. Although a similar technique has been proposed in the statistical community [102, 103, 59, 86] before, the primary e orts are focusing on computing the mean of a data set. Our method extend the technique to support various other standard statistical analysis operations, such as computing standard deviation, correlation coecient, and linear regression line. 106 Problem 6.2.1. ....
S. L. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 66(336):884-888, December, 1971.
....among the interviewees an undesirable requirement in the real life. In this dissertation, we have developed a method (the data perturbation technique) that can support such a type of privacy preserving survey. Although a similar technique has been proposed in the statistical community [102, 103, 59, 86] before, the primary e orts are focusing on computing the mean of a data set. Our method extend the technique to support various other standard statistical analysis operations, such as computing standard deviation, correlation coecient, and linear regression line. 106 Problem 6.2.1. ....
S. L. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 60(309):63-69, March, 1965.
.... results showing that the proposed techniques cannot satisfy the conflicting objectives of providing high quality statistics and at the same time prevent exact or partial disclosure of individual information [1] The most relevant work from the statistical database literature is the work by Warner [26], where he developed the randomized response method for survey results. The method deals with a single boolean attribute (e.g. drug addiction) The value of the attribute is retained with probability p and flipped with probability 1 Gamma p. Warner then derived equations for estimating the ....
S. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. J. Am. Stat. Assoc., 60(309):63--69, March 1965.
.... cells of small size [9] and clustering entities into mutually exclusive atomic populations [61] The perturbation family includes swapping values between records [12] replacing the original database by a sample from the same distribution [33] 42] adding noise to the values in the database [52] [57], adding noise to the results of a query [4] and sampling the result of a query [11] Hippocratic databases share with statistical databases the goal of preventing disclosure of private information, and hence some of the techniques developed for statistical databases will find application in ....
S. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. J. Am. Stat. Assoc. , 60(309):63--69, March 1965.
.... mutually exclusive atomic populations (e.g. YC77] The perturbation family includes swapping values between records (e.g. Den82] replacing the original database by a sample from the same distribution (e.g. LST83] LCL85] Rei84] adding noise to the values in the database (e.g. TYW84] War65] adding noise to the results of a query (e.g. Bec80] and sampling the result of a query (e.g. Den80] There are negative results showing that the proposed techniques cannot satisfy the conflicting objectives of providing high quality statistics and at the same time prevent exact or partial ....
....the value with probability p, and choose one of the other values at random with probability 1 Gamma p. We may then derive an equation similar to Equation 1, and iteratively reconstruct the original distribution of values. Alternately, we may be able to extend the analytical approach presented in [War65] for boolean attributes to derive an equation that directly gives estimates of the original distribution. Acknowledgments A hallway conversation with Robert Morris provided initial impetus for this work. Peter Haas diligently checked the soundness of the reconstruction procedure. ....
S.L. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. J. Am. Stat. Assoc., 60(309):63--69, March 1965.
No context found.
Stanley L. Warner. Randomized Response: A Survey Technique for Eliminating Evasive Answer Bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 60(309):63--69, March 1965. A Security of Modified Oblivious Transfer Protocol From our oblivious transfer protocol
No context found.
Warner, S. L. (1965). Randomized response: a survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association 60, 63--69.
No context found.
S. L. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 60(309):63--69, 1965.
No context found.
S. L. Warner. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. The American Statistical Association, 60(309):63--69, March 1965.
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