English

FLRSP: Privacy-Preserving Federated Learning Using Randomly Selected Model Parameters

Cryptography and Security 2026-05-05 v1

Abstract

In this paper, we propose a method for privacy-preserving federated learning that uses randomly selected model parameters to update global models. High-quality deep neural networks (DNN) models require a huge amount of training data in general, but model training raises privacy concerns when dealing with sensitive or personal information. Federated learning is a distributed machine learning framework in which multiple clients and a server train a model collaboratively. However, if the shared updates are compromised, an attacker may reconstruct the original training data. In addition, previous methods for improving robustness generally reduce the accuracy. To overcome these issues, in our method called federated learning using randomly selected model parameters (FLRSP), model parameters computed in each local server are randomly selected and shared to update a global model in a central server. In experiments, image classification tasks were carried out on the ResNet34 architecture and the Vision Transformer (ViT) under the use of Federated Stochastic Gradient Descent (FedSGD) and Federated Averaging (FedAvg), and the results demonstrated our method's effectiveness in terms of image classification accuracy and robustness against state-of-the-art attacks compared with previous methods.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.01204,
  title  = {FLRSP: Privacy-Preserving Federated Learning Using Randomly Selected Model Parameters},
  author = {Hiroto Sawada and Shoko Imaizumi and Hitoshi Kiya},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.01204},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

29 pages, 13figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T12:46:13.605Z