Differentially Private Boxplots

Kelly Ramsay, Jairo Diaz-Rodriguez
Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning, PMLR 267:51117-51139, 2025.

Abstract

Despite the potential of differentially private data visualization to harmonize data analysis and privacy, research in this area remains underdeveloped. Boxplots are a widely popular visualization used for summarizing a dataset and for comparison of multiple datasets. Consequentially, we introduce a differentially private boxplot. We evaluate its effectiveness for displaying location, scale, skewness and tails of a given empirical distribution. In our theoretical exposition, we show that the location and scale of the boxplot are estimated with optimal sample complexity, and the skewness and tails are estimated consistently, which is not always the case for a boxplot naively constructed from a single existing differentially private quantile algorithm. As a byproduct of this exposition, we introduce several new results concerning private quantile estimation. In simulations, we show that this boxplot performs similarly to a non-private boxplot, and it outperforms the naive boxplot. Additionally, we conduct a real data analysis of Airbnb listings, which shows that comparable analysis can be achieved through differentially private boxplot visualization.

Cite this Paper


BibTeX
@InProceedings{pmlr-v267-ramsay25a, title = {Differentially Private Boxplots}, author = {Ramsay, Kelly and Diaz-Rodriguez, Jairo}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning}, pages = {51117--51139}, year = {2025}, editor = {Singh, Aarti and Fazel, Maryam and Hsu, Daniel and Lacoste-Julien, Simon and Berkenkamp, Felix and Maharaj, Tegan and Wagstaff, Kiri and Zhu, Jerry}, volume = {267}, series = {Proceedings of Machine Learning Research}, month = {13--19 Jul}, publisher = {PMLR}, pdf = {https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mlresearch/v267/main/assets/ramsay25a/ramsay25a.pdf}, url = {https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/ramsay25a.html}, abstract = {Despite the potential of differentially private data visualization to harmonize data analysis and privacy, research in this area remains underdeveloped. Boxplots are a widely popular visualization used for summarizing a dataset and for comparison of multiple datasets. Consequentially, we introduce a differentially private boxplot. We evaluate its effectiveness for displaying location, scale, skewness and tails of a given empirical distribution. In our theoretical exposition, we show that the location and scale of the boxplot are estimated with optimal sample complexity, and the skewness and tails are estimated consistently, which is not always the case for a boxplot naively constructed from a single existing differentially private quantile algorithm. As a byproduct of this exposition, we introduce several new results concerning private quantile estimation. In simulations, we show that this boxplot performs similarly to a non-private boxplot, and it outperforms the naive boxplot. Additionally, we conduct a real data analysis of Airbnb listings, which shows that comparable analysis can be achieved through differentially private boxplot visualization.} }
Endnote
%0 Conference Paper %T Differentially Private Boxplots %A Kelly Ramsay %A Jairo Diaz-Rodriguez %B Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning %C Proceedings of Machine Learning Research %D 2025 %E Aarti Singh %E Maryam Fazel %E Daniel Hsu %E Simon Lacoste-Julien %E Felix Berkenkamp %E Tegan Maharaj %E Kiri Wagstaff %E Jerry Zhu %F pmlr-v267-ramsay25a %I PMLR %P 51117--51139 %U https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/ramsay25a.html %V 267 %X Despite the potential of differentially private data visualization to harmonize data analysis and privacy, research in this area remains underdeveloped. Boxplots are a widely popular visualization used for summarizing a dataset and for comparison of multiple datasets. Consequentially, we introduce a differentially private boxplot. We evaluate its effectiveness for displaying location, scale, skewness and tails of a given empirical distribution. In our theoretical exposition, we show that the location and scale of the boxplot are estimated with optimal sample complexity, and the skewness and tails are estimated consistently, which is not always the case for a boxplot naively constructed from a single existing differentially private quantile algorithm. As a byproduct of this exposition, we introduce several new results concerning private quantile estimation. In simulations, we show that this boxplot performs similarly to a non-private boxplot, and it outperforms the naive boxplot. Additionally, we conduct a real data analysis of Airbnb listings, which shows that comparable analysis can be achieved through differentially private boxplot visualization.
APA
Ramsay, K. & Diaz-Rodriguez, J.. (2025). Differentially Private Boxplots. Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning, in Proceedings of Machine Learning Research 267:51117-51139 Available from https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/ramsay25a.html.

Related Material