scholarly journals Trustworthiness of Dynamic Moving Sensors for Secure Mobile Edge Computing

Computers ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 63 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Yoon

Wireless sensor network is an emerging technology, and the collaboration of wireless sensors becomes one of the active research areas for utilizing sensor data. Various sensors collaborate to recognize the changes of a target environment, to identify, if any radical change occurs. For the accuracy improvement, the calibration of sensors has been discussed, and sensor data analytics are becoming popular in research and development. However, they are not satisfactorily efficient for the situations where sensor devices are dynamically moving, abruptly appearing, or disappearing. If the abrupt appearance of sensors is a zero-day attack, and the disappearance of sensors is an ill-functioning comrade, then sensor data analytics of untrusted sensors will result in an indecisive artifact. The predefined sensor requirements or meta-data-based sensor verification is not adaptive to identify dynamically moving sensors. This paper describes a deep-learning approach to verify the trustworthiness of sensors by considering the sensor data only. The proposed verification on sensors can be done without having to use meta-data about sensors or to request consultation from a cloud server. The contribution of this paper includes (1) quality preservation of sensor data for mining analytics. The sensor data are trained to identify their characteristics of outliers: whether they are attack outliers, or outlier-like abrupt changes in environments; and (2) authenticity verification of dynamically moving sensors, which was possible. Previous unknown sensors are also identified by deep-learning approach.

Author(s):  
John Yoon

Wireless Sensor Network is an emerging technology and the collaboration of wireless sensors becomes one of the active research areas to utilize sensor data. Various sensors collaborate to recognize the changes of a target environment, to identify, if occurs, any radical change. For the accuracy improvement, the calibration of sensors has been discussed, and sensor data analytics are becoming popular in research and development. However, they are not satisfactorily efficient for the situations where sensor devices are dynamically moving, abruptly appearing or disappearing. If the abrupt appearance of sensors is a zero-day attack and the disappearance of sensors is an ill-functioning comrade, then sensor data analytics of untrusted sensors will result in an indecisive artifact. The pre-defined sensor requirements or meta-data based sensors verification is not adaptive to identify dynamically moving sensors. This paper describes a deep-learning approach to verify the trustworthiness of sensors by considering the sensor data only, without having to use meta-data about sensors or to request consultation from a cloud server. The contribution of this paper includes 1) quality preservation of sensor data for mining analytics and 2) authenticity verification of dynamically moving sensors with no external consultation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 33-51
Author(s):  
Rostom Mennour ◽  
Mohamed Batouche

Big data analytics and deep learning are nowadays two of the most active research areas in computer science. As the data is becoming bigger and bigger, deep learning has a very important role to play in data analytics, and big data technologies will give it huge opportunities for different sectors. Deep learning brings new challenges especially when it comes to large amounts of data, the volume of datasets has to be processed and managed, also data in various applications come in a streaming way and deep learning approaches have to deal with this kind of applications. In this paper, the authors propose two novel approaches for discriminative deep learning, namely LS-DSN, and StreamDSN that are inspired from the deep stacking network algorithm. Two versions of the gradient descent algorithm were used to train the proposed algorithms. The experiment results have shown that the algorithms gave satisfying accuracy results and scale well when the size of data increases. In addition, StreamDSN algorithm have been applied to classify beats of ECG signals and provided good promising results.


Author(s):  
Rostom Mennour ◽  
Mohamed Batouche

Big data analytics and deep learning are nowadays two of the most active research areas in computer science. As the data is becoming bigger and bigger, deep learning has a very important role to play in data analytics, and big data technologies will give it huge opportunities for different sectors. Deep learning brings new challenges especially when it comes to large amounts of data, the volume of datasets has to be processed and managed, also data in various applications come in a streaming way and deep learning approaches have to deal with this kind of applications. In this paper, the authors propose two novel approaches for discriminative deep learning, namely LS-DSN, and StreamDSN that are inspired from the deep stacking network algorithm. Two versions of the gradient descent algorithm were used to train the proposed algorithms. The experiment results have shown that the algorithms gave satisfying accuracy results and scale well when the size of data increases. In addition, StreamDSN algorithm have been applied to classify beats of ECG signals and provided good promising results.


Author(s):  
Julio Galvan ◽  
Ashok Raja ◽  
Yanyan Li ◽  
Jiawei Yuan

2021 ◽  
pp. 73-85
Author(s):  
Bharani Ujjaini Kempaiah ◽  
Ruben John Mampilli ◽  
K. S. Goutham

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 6618-6628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Fan Zhang ◽  
Peter J. Thorburn ◽  
Wei Xiang ◽  
Peter Fitch

Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 714 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Soro ◽  
Gino Brunner ◽  
Simon Tanner ◽  
Roger Wattenhofer

Activity recognition using off-the-shelf smartwatches is an important problem in humanactivity recognition. In this paper, we present an end-to-end deep learning approach, able to provideprobability distributions over activities from raw sensor data. We apply our methods to 10 complexfull-body exercises typical in CrossFit, and achieve a classification accuracy of 99.96%. We additionallyshow that the same neural network used for exercise recognition can also be used in repetitioncounting. To the best of our knowledge, our approach to repetition counting is novel and performswell, counting correctly within an error of 1 repetitions in 91% of the performed sets.


MIS Quarterly ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 1459-1492
Author(s):  
Donghyuk Shin ◽  
Shu He ◽  
Gene Moo Lee ◽  
Andrew B. Whinston ◽  
Suleyman Cetintas ◽  
...  

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