4.8 Article

Federated Learning-Empowered Disease Diagnosis Mechanism in the Internet of Medical Things: From the Privacy-Preservation Perspective

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRIAL INFORMATICS
Volume 19, Issue 7, Pages 7905-7913

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TII.2022.3210597

Keywords

Disease diagnosis; federated learning (FL); Internet of Medical Things (IoMT); privacy protection

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The integration of IoT and the medical industry has led to the emergence of IoMT. In IoMT, physicians analyze patient data collected through mobile devices with the assistance of AI systems. However, traditional AI technologies may compromise patient privacy. To address this issue, we propose a privacy-enhanced disease diagnosis mechanism using federated learning in IoMT.
The deep integration of the Internet of Things (IoT) and the medical industry has given birth to the Internet of Medical Things (IoMT). In IoMT, physicians treat a patient's disease by analyzing patient data collected through mobile devices with the assistance of an artificial intelligence (AI)-empowered systems. However, the traditional AI technologies may lead to the leakage of patient privacy data due to its own design flaws. As a privacy-preserving federated learning (FL) can generate a global disease diagnosis model through multiparty collaboration. However, FL is still unable to resist inference attacks. In this article, to address such problems, we propose a privacy-enhanced disease diagnosis mechanism using FL for IoMT. Specifically, we first reconstruct medical data through a variational autoencoder and add differential privacy noise to it to resist inference attacks. These data are then used to train local disease diagnosis models, thereby preserving patients' privacy. Furthermore, to encourage participation in FL, we propose an incentive mechanism to provide corresponding rewards to participants. Experiments are conducted on the arrhythmia database Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Beth Israel Hospital (MIT-BIH). The experimental results show that the proposed mechanism reduces the probability of reconstructing patient medical data while ensuring high-precision heart disease diagnosis.

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