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Federated learning (FL) enables collaborative model training without sharing raw data, yet model updates remain vulnerable to inference attacks. In non-IID settings, category inference attacks can reveal the label distribution of individual clients, posing serious privacy risks. User-level differential privacy (DP) offers formal protection, but existing methods rely on uniform clipping and isotropic noise injection, ignoring client heterogeneity and parameter importance, which often degrades model utility. To address these limitations, we propose Fisher-Guided Adaptive Clipping and Privacy Budget Allocation (FACP), a unified framework that integrates Fisher information into the user-level DP pipeline to improve the privacy–utility trade-off in federated learning. FACP leverages Fisher information as a principled measure of parameter importance in two complementary components. First, a Fisher-adaptive clipping mechanism combines historical client update statistics with global Fisher importance to derive parameter-wise sensitivity bounds. Second, a Fisher-guided privacy budget allocation strategy redistributes noise inversely proportional to parameter importance through an anisotropic Gaussian mechanism. Experiments on MNIST, EMNIST, CIFAR-10, and CIFAR-100 show that FACP effectively suppresses category inference attacks while consistently achieving higher model accuracy than existing user-level DP baselines, improving accuracy by 1.0%–2.9% across datasets. These results validate the effectiveness of integrating Fisher-driven structural information into clipping and privacy budget allocation and demonstrate a more favorable privacy–utility trade-off.
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Lei Shi
Cheng Gu
Yuqi Fan
High-Confidence Computing
Hefei University of Technology
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Shi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a07a124d343c0cd6cc63e56 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hcc.2026.100399