Gaussian Differentially Private e-values: Construction, Threshold Calibration, and Multiple Testing

Abstract

This paper develops a framework for differentially private e-values under Gaussian differential privacy (μ-GDP). We characterize the canonical noise mechanism, establishing that optimal multiplicative perturbation follows a Gaussian distribution. Using this distribution, we derive a globally sharp rejection threshold that strictly improves upon the standard Markov bound. Asymptotic analysis shows that in low-sensitivity regimes, the calibrated private test achieves a net power gain over the non-private baseline. For multiple testing, we introduce a recursive peeling algorithm that adaptively concentrates the privacy budget on the most promising hypotheses. This construction guarantees rigorous μ-GDP and yields valid private e-values compatible with standard multiple testing procedures. Simulations and a genome-wide association study confirm that the method controls the false discovery rate while improving upon naive all-noisy privatization and recovering power close to non-private benchmarks.

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