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Dr. Daniel G. Alabi ECE Faculty Candidate Seminar

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Location
B02 CSL Auditorum & Zoom
Date
Mar 26, 2024   10:00 - 11:00 am  
Speaker
Dr. Daniel G. Alabi, Columbia University
Contact
Angie Ellis
E-Mail
amellis@illinois.edu
Phone
217-300-1910
Views
59
Originating Calendar
Illinois ECE Calendar

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Candidate Seminar

Dr. Daniel G. Alabi

Simons Society Junior Fellow, Columbia University

Tuesday, March 26, 2024, 10:00-11:00 am

B02 CSL Auditorium or Online via Zoom

Private Linear Regression: Options, Obstacles, and Opportunities

Abstract: Researchers and practitioners (including social scientists, political scientists, economists, and healthcare scientists) crucially rely on statistical methods to further the study of individuals, society, and human behavior via inferential analysis. Unfortunately, the naive application and release of resulting statistics could reveal sensitive information about the individuals in the dataset. As a result, differential privacy (DP) has been proposed as a strong definition of privacy that can prevent reconstruction and membership inference attacks. However, we are still in the nascent stages of understanding the statistical validity of DP methods.

One of the most fundamental statistical techniques is linear regression, commonly used for predicting, testing, and augmenting relationships between two or more variables. In this talk, I will discuss my algorithmic and analytical contributions to private linear regression, showcasing the capabilities and limits of such methods in a range of settings.

Daniel G. Alabi is a Simons Society Junior Fellow at Columbia University. He earned his Ph.D. in computer science from the Theory of Computation group at Harvard University, where he was advised by Salil Vadhan. Also, he is the president and co-founder of NaijaCoder, Inc. NaijaCoder aims to proliferate early algorithms education in Africa with a focus on Nigeria.

His research interests lie primarily in the design, analysis, limitations, and applications of algorithms. During his Ph.D., he was supported by a Fellowship from Meta, a Harvard CRCS Graduate Fellowship, and a Courtlandt Memorial Fellowship from Harvard GSAS.

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