LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

A scalable privacy-preserving framework for temporal record linkage

Photo by dtopkin1 from unsplash

Record linkage (RL) is the process of identifying matching records from different databases that refer to the same entity. In many applications, it is common that the attribute values of… Click to show full abstract

Record linkage (RL) is the process of identifying matching records from different databases that refer to the same entity. In many applications, it is common that the attribute values of records that belong to the same entity evolve over time, for example people can change their surname or address. Therefore, to identify the records that refer to the same entity over time, RL should make use of temporal information such as the time-stamp of when a record was created and/or update last. However, if RL needs to be conducted on information about people, due to privacy and confidentiality concerns organisations are often not willing or allowed to share sensitive data in their databases, such as personal medical records or location and financial details, with other organisations. This paper proposes a scalable framework for privacy-preserving temporal record linkage that can link different databases while ensuring the privacy of sensitive data in these databases. We propose two protocols that can be used in different linkage scenarios with and without a third party. Our protocols use Bloom filter encoding which incorporates the temporal information available in records during the linkage process. Our approaches first securely calculate the probabilities of entities changing attribute values in their records over a period of time. Based on these probabilities, we then generate a set of masking Bloom filters to adjust the similarities between record pairs. We provide a theoretical analysis of the complexity and privacy of our techniques and conduct an empirical study on large real databases containing several millions of records. The experimental results show that our approaches can achieve better linkage quality compared to non-temporal PPRL while providing privacy to individuals in the databases that are being linked.

Keywords: record linkage; privacy preserving; linkage; privacy; temporal record

Journal Title: Knowledge and Information Systems
Year Published: 2019

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.