Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
Proportionally Fair Hospital Collaborations in Federated Learning of Histopathology Images
49
Zitationen
4
Autoren
2023
Jahr
Abstract
Medical centers and healthcare providers have concerns and hence restrictions around sharing data with external collaborators. Federated learning, as a privacy-preserving method, involves learning a site-independent model without having direct access to patient-sensitive data in a distributed collaborative fashion. The federated approach relies on decentralized data distribution from various hospitals and clinics. The collaboratively learned global model is supposed to have acceptable performance for the individual sites. However, existing methods focus on minimizing the average of the aggregated loss functions, leading to a biased model that performs perfectly for some hospitals while exhibiting undesirable performance for other sites. In this paper, we improve model "fairness" among participating hospitals by proposing a novel federated learning scheme called Proportionally Fair Federated Learning, short Prop-FFL. Prop-FFL is based on a novel optimization objective function to decrease the performance variations among participating hospitals. This function encourages a fair model, providing us with more uniform performance across participating hospitals. We validate the proposed Prop-FFL on two histopathology datasets as well as two general datasets to shed light on its inherent capabilities. The experimental results suggest promising performance in terms of learning speed, accuracy, and fairness.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
k-ANONYMITY: A MODEL FOR PROTECTING PRIVACY
2002 · 8.395 Zit.
Calibrating Noise to Sensitivity in Private Data Analysis
2006 · 6.872 Zit.
Deep Learning with Differential Privacy
2016 · 5.595 Zit.
Communication-Efficient Learning of Deep Networks from Decentralized\n Data
2016 · 5.591 Zit.
Large-Scale Machine Learning with Stochastic Gradient Descent
2010 · 5.564 Zit.