Publication | Closed Access
Protection of Geoprivacy and Accuracy of Spatial Information: How Effective Are Geographical Masks?
174
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
Spatial ScienceCartographyPrivacy ProtectionData ConfidentialityEngineeringFranklin CountyGeospatial DataGeographyData AnonymizationData PrivacyUrban PlanningInformation PrivacyGeospatial PerspectivePublic HealthStatisticsPrivacySocial SciencesSpatial Information
Spatial analysis and mapping of georeferenced, individual-level data can help identify important geographical patterns or lead to knowledge significant for dealing with specific social issues in a particular area. However, given the need to protect personal privacy when using geospatial data, the possibility for undertaking geographical analysis on certain types of individual-level data is becoming increasingly circumscribed. This article addresses the need to protect geoprivacy while making georeferenced, individual-level data available in such a way that analytical results are not significantly affected. The effectiveness of three geographical masks with different perturbation radii (r) is examined using a data set for lung-cancer deaths in Franklin County, Ohio, in 1999. The findings reveal a rather consistent trade-off between data confidentiality and accuracy of analytical results. There seems to be a threshold r-value at which the results of analyses on masked data become substantially different from the original results. An r that produces an area about the average size of the study-area census-block groups achieves a desirable optimum trade-off between privacy protection and accuracy of results. The study shows that implementing appropriate geographical masks may help data managers or researchers establish the desirable trade-off, in a particular context, between privacy protection and accuracy of geographic information.
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