| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6747699 | International Journal of Critical Infrastructure Protection | 2014 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
This paper uses the Tennessee Eastman challenge process to investigate the problem of an attacker who has to identify (in real time) the optimal moment to launch a DoS attack. The results suggest that, by attacking sensor and controller signals, the attacker can manipulate the process at will, but the success of the attack depends considerably on the specific stale values due to the dynamic nature of the process. The choice of time to begin an attack is forward-looking, requiring the attacker to consider each current opportunity against the possibility of a better opportunity in the future; this lends itself to the theory of optimal stopping problems. In particular, this paper studies the applicability of the Best Choice Problem (also known as the Secretary Problem), quickest change detection and statistical process outliers. The analysis can be used to identify specific sensor measurements that need to be protected and the time-to-response necessary to enable process operators and asset owners to define appropriate attack response strategies.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Networks and Communications
Authors
Marina Krotofil, Alvaro Cárdenas, Jason Larsen, Dieter Gollmann,
