Universal Shuffle Asymptotics, Part II: Non-Gaussian Limits for Shuffle Privacy -- Poisson, Skellam, and Compound-Poisson Regimes

Abstract

Part I of this series (arXiv:2602.09029) develops a sharp Gaussian (LAN/GDP) limit theory for neighboring shuffle experiments when the local randomizer is fixed and has full support bounded away from zero. The present paper characterizes the first universality-breaking frontier: critical sequences of increasingly concentrated local randomizers for which classical Lindeberg conditions fail and the shuffle score exhibits rare macroscopic jumps. For shuffled binary randomized response with local privacy 0 = 0(n), we prove experiment-level convergence (in Le Cam distance) to explicit shift limit experiments: a Poisson-shift limit for the canonical neighboring pair when (0(n))/n c2, and a Skellam-shift limit for proportional compositions k/n π ∈ (0,1) in the same scaling, including an explicit disappearance of the two-sided δ-floor away from boundary compositions. For general finite alphabets, we introduce a sparse-error critical regime and prove a multivariate compound-Poisson / independent Poisson vector limit for the centered released histogram, yielding a multivariate Poisson-shift experiment and an explicit limiting (, δ) curve as a multivariate Poisson series. Together with Part I, these results yield a three-regime picture (Gaussian/GDP, critical Poisson/Skellam/compound-Poisson, and super-critical no privacy) under convergent macroscopic scalings.

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