The 2020 Census Disclosure Avoidance System TopDown Algorithm
John Abowd (),
Robert Ashmead,
Ryan Cumings-Menon,
Simson Garfinkel,
Micah Heineck,
Christine Heiss,
Robert Johns,
Daniel Kifer,
Philip Leclerc,
Ashwin Machanavajjhala,
Brett Moran,
William Sexton,
Matthew Spence and
Pavel Zhuravlev
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
The Census TopDown Algorithm (TDA) is a disclosure avoidance system using differential privacy for privacy-loss accounting. The algorithm ingests the final, edited version of the 2020 Census data and the final tabulation geographic definitions. The algorithm then creates noisy versions of key queries on the data, referred to as measurements, using zero-Concentrated Differential Privacy. Another key aspect of the TDA are invariants, statistics that the Census Bureau has determined, as matter of policy, to exclude from the privacy-loss accounting. The TDA post-processes the measurements together with the invariants to produce a Microdata Detail File (MDF) that contains one record for each person and one record for each housing unit enumerated in the 2020 Census. The MDF is passed to the 2020 Census tabulation system to produce the 2020 Census Redistricting Data (P.L. 94-171) Summary File. This paper describes the mathematics and testing of the TDA for this purpose.
Date: 2022-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ure
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