Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
393987 Information Sciences 2013 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

Anomaly detection is indispensable for satisfying security services in mobile ad hoc network (MANET) applications. Often, however, a highly secure mechanism consumes a large amount of network resources, resulting in network performance degradation. To shift intrusion detection from existing security-centric design approaches to network performance centric design schemes, this paper presents a framework for designing an energy-aware and self-adaptive anomaly detection scheme for resource constrained MANETs. The scheme uses network tomography, a new technique for studying internal link performance based solely on end-to-end measurements. With the support of a module comprising a novel spatial-time model to identify the MANET topology, an energy-aware algorithm to sponsor system service, a method based on the expectation maximum to infer delay distribution, and a Self-organizing Map (SOM) neural network solution to profile link activity, the proposed system is capable of detecting link anomalies and localizing malicious nodes. Consequently, the proposed scheme offers a trade-off between overall network security and network performance, without causing any heavy network overload. Moreover, it provides an additional approach to monitor the spatial-time behavior of MANETs, including network topology, link performance and network security. The effectiveness of the proposed schemes is verified through extensive experiments.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Artificial Intelligence
Authors
, , , , ,