๐
๐
The Cartographer
Computation-Utility-Privacy Tradeoffs in Bayesian Estimation
March 18, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท ๐ STOC 2026
Authors
Sitan Chen, Jingqiu Ding, Mahbod Majid, Walter McKelvie
arXiv ID
2603.18254
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Cross-listed
cs.CC,
cs.IT,
cs.LG,
stat.ML
Citations
0
Venue
STOC 2026
Abstract
Bayesian methods lie at the heart of modern data science and provide a powerful scaffolding for estimation in data-constrained settings and principled quantification and propagation of uncertainty. Yet in many real-world use cases where these methods are deployed, there is a natural need to preserve the privacy of the individuals whose data is being scrutinized. While a number of works have attempted to approach the problem of differentially private Bayesian estimation through either reasoning about the inherent privacy of the posterior distribution or privatizing off-the-shelf Bayesian methods, these works generally do not come with rigorous utility guarantees beyond low-dimensional settings. In fact, even for the prototypical tasks of Gaussian mean estimation and linear regression, it was unknown how close one could get to the Bayes-optimal error with a private algorithm, even in the simplest case where the unknown parameter comes from a Gaussian prior. In this work, we give the first efficient algorithms for both of these problems that achieve mean-squared error $(1+o(1))\mathrm{OPT}$ and additionally show that both tasks exhibit an intriguing computational-statistical gap. For Bayesian mean estimation, we prove that the excess risk achieved by our method is optimal among all efficient algorithms within the low-degree framework, yet is provably worse than what is achievable by an exponential-time algorithm. For linear regression, we prove a qualitatively similar lower bound. Our algorithms draw upon the privacy-to-robustness framework of arXiv:2212.05015, but with the curious twist that to achieve private Bayes-optimal estimation, we need to design sum-of-squares-based robust estimators for inherently non-robust objects like the empirical mean and OLS estimator. Along the way we also add to the sum-of-squares toolkit a new kind of constraint based on short-flat decompositions.
Community Contributions
Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!
๐ Similar Papers
In the same crypt โ Data Structures & Algorithms
R.I.P.
๐ป
Ghosted
Route Planning in Transportation Networks
R.I.P.
๐ป
Ghosted
Near-linear time approximation algorithms for optimal transport via Sinkhorn iteration
R.I.P.
๐ป
Ghosted
Hierarchical Clustering: Objective Functions and Algorithms
R.I.P.
๐ป
Ghosted
Graph Isomorphism in Quasipolynomial Time
๐
๐
The Cartographer