Association rule mining on fragmented database
Abstract
Anonymization methods are an important tool to protect privacy. The goal is to release data while preventing individuals from being identified. Most approaches generalize data, reducing the level of detail so that many individuals appear the same. An alternate class of methods, including anatomy, fragmentation, and slicing, preserves detail by generalizing only the link between identifying and sensitive data. We investigate learning association rules on such a database. Association rule mining on a generalized database is challenging, as specific values are replaced with generalizations, eliminating interesting fine-grained correlations. We instead learn association rules from a fragmented database, preserving fine-grained values. Only rules involving both identifying and sensitive information are affected; we demonstrate the efficacy of learning in such environment.
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