Applied Artificial Intelligence (Dec 2023)

Waveforms Eavesdropping Prevention Framework: The Case of Classification of EPG Waveforms of Aphid Utilizing Wavelet Kernel Extreme Learning Machine

  • Yuqing Xing,
  • Baofang Li,
  • Lili Wu,
  • Fengming Yan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/08839514.2023.2214766
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 1

Abstract

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Since all information depends solely on the training data, machine learning algorithms typically do not employ external knowledge or other experiences during the learning process. Methods for machine learning have been rigorously tested against novel varieties of highly technical “black box” or “white box” adversarial attacks. By employing attacks, attackers can change systems to serve a harmful end goal. When authorized implementers and eavesdroppers are geographically close together, it is difficult to perform secure beamforming in waveform applications, for instance, leading to erroneous beam forms and, as a result, disastrous beam leakages. As a result, the first move in a prospective black-box offense will be based on the waveform features of a learning signal. By including a non-orthogonality concept into the physical layer signal waveform, the Waveforms Eavesdropping Prevention Framework (WEPF) proposed in this work aims to boost machine learning security to address these difficulties. The implementation scenario is based on a waveforms scenario used to categorize the Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) for insects, a crucial tool for researching the feeding conduct of piercing-sucking insects and the transition mechanism between viruses and insects. An attribute vector with six dimensions, consisting of low-frequency wavelet energy (LFWE) in the second and third layers of the Wavelet Kernel Extreme Learning Machine, fractal box dimension (FBD), the Hurst exponent (HE), and spectral centroid (SC) in the first two layers of the HHT, was used to test the proposed framework. Two adversarial scenarios were explored. However, the suggested architecture secures all waveform signals, demonstrating the method’s effectiveness in lowering the risk of eavesdropping or tampering with the waveforms used in advanced machine-learning methods.