672 research outputs found

    Neural Network based Short Term Forecasting Engine To Optimize Energy And Big Data Storage Resources Of Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Energy efficient wireless networks is the primary research goal for evolving billion device applications like IoT, smart grids and CPS. Monitoring of multiple physical events using sensors and data collection at central gateways is the general architecture followed by most commercial, residential and test bed implementations. Most of the events monitored at regular intervals are largely redundant/minor variations leading to large wastage of data storage resources in Big data servers and communication energy at relay and sensor nodes. In this paper a novel architecture of Neural Network (NN) based day ahead steady state forecasting engine is implemented at the gateway using historical database. Gateway generates an optimal transmit schedules based on NN outputs thereby reducing the redundant sensor data when there is minor variations in the respective predicted sensor estimates. It is observed that NN based load forecasting for power monitoring system predicts load with less than 3% Mean Absolute Percentage Error (MAPE). Gateway forward transmit schedules to all power sensing nodes day ahead to reduce sensor and relay nodes communication energy. Matlab based simulation for evaluating the benefits of proposed model for extending the wireless network life time is developed and confirmed with an emulation scenario of our testbed. Network life time is improved by 43% from the observed results using proposed model

    An adaptive framework for real-time data reduction in AMI

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    In existing Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), data collection intervals for each smart meter (SM) typically vary from 15 to 60 min. If we have 1 million SMs that transmit data every 15 min, these SMs will export 4 million records per hour. This leads to dramatically increasing bandwidth usage, energy consumption, traffic cost and I/O congestion. In this work, we present an adaptive framework for minimizing the amount of data transfer from SMs. The reduction in the framework is forecasting-based; when an SM reading is close to the forecasted value, the SM does not transmit the reading. In order for the framework to be adaptive to the ever-changing pattern of SM data, it is provided with a pool of forecasting methods. A supervised-learning scheme is employed to switch in real-time to the forecasting method most suitable to the current data pattern. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed framework achieves data reduction rates up to 98% with accuracy 96%, depending on the operational parameters of the framework and consumer behavior (statistical features of SM data)

    Toward intelligent cyber-physical systems: Digital twin meets artificial intelligence

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    Industry 4.0 aims to support smarter and autonomous processes while improving agility, cost efficiency, and user experience. To fulfill its promises, properly processing the data of the industrial processes and infrastructures is required. Artificial intelligence (AI) appears as a strong candidate to handle all generated data, and to help in the automation and smartification process. This article overviews the digital twin as a true embodiment of a cyber-physical system (CPS) in Industry 4.0, showing the mission of AI in this concept. It presents the key enabling technologies of the digital twin such as edge, fog, and 5G, where the physical processes are integrated with the computing and network domains. The role of AI in each technology domain is identified by analyzing a set of AI agents at the application and infrastructure levels. Finally, movement prediction is selected and experimentally validated using real data generated by a digital twin for robotic arms with results showcasing its potential.This work has been (partially) funded by the H2020 EU/TW joint action 5G-DIVE (Grant #859881) and the H2020 5Growth project (Grant #856709). It has also been funded by the Spanish State Research Agency (TRUE5G project, PID2019-108713RB-C52/AEI/10.13039/501100011033)

    Anomaly detection in smart city wireless sensor networks

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    Aquesta tesi proposa una plataforma de detecció d’intrusions per a revelar atacs a les xarxes de sensors sense fils (WSN, per les sigles en anglès) de les ciutats intel·ligents (smart cities). La plataforma està dissenyada tenint en compte les necessitats dels administradors de la ciutat intel·ligent, els quals necessiten accés a una arquitectura centralitzada que pugui gestionar alarmes de seguretat en un sistema altament heterogeni i distribuït. En aquesta tesi s’identifiquen els diversos passos necessaris des de la recollida de dades fins a l’execució de les tècniques de detecció d’intrusions i s’avalua que el procés sigui escalable i capaç de gestionar dades típiques de ciutats intel·ligents. A més, es comparen diversos algorismes de detecció d’anomalies i s’observa que els mètodes de vectors de suport d’una mateixa classe (one-class support vector machines) resulten la tècnica multivariant més adequada per a descobrir atacs tenint en compte les necessitats d’aquest context. Finalment, es proposa un esquema per a ajudar els administradors a identificar els tipus d’atacs rebuts a partir de les alarmes disparades.Esta tesis propone una plataforma de detección de intrusiones para revelar ataques en las redes de sensores inalámbricas (WSN, por las siglas en inglés) de las ciudades inteligentes (smart cities). La plataforma está diseñada teniendo en cuenta la necesidad de los administradores de la ciudad inteligente, los cuales necesitan acceso a una arquitectura centralizada que pueda gestionar alarmas de seguridad en un sistema altamente heterogéneo y distribuido. En esta tesis se identifican los varios pasos necesarios desde la recolección de datos hasta la ejecución de las técnicas de detección de intrusiones y se evalúa que el proceso sea escalable y capaz de gestionar datos típicos de ciudades inteligentes. Además, se comparan varios algoritmos de detección de anomalías y se observa que las máquinas de vectores de soporte de una misma clase (one-class support vector machines) resultan la técnica multivariante más adecuada para descubrir ataques teniendo en cuenta las necesidades de este contexto. Finalmente, se propone un esquema para ayudar a los administradores a identificar los tipos de ataques recibidos a partir de las alarmas disparadas.This thesis proposes an intrusion detection platform which reveals attacks in smart city wireless sensor networks (WSN). The platform is designed taking into account the needs of smart city administrators, who need access to a centralized architecture that can manage security alarms in a highly heterogeneous and distributed system. In this thesis, we identify the various necessary steps from gathering WSN data to running the detection techniques and we evaluate whether the procedure is scalable and capable of handling typical smart city data. Moreover, we compare several anomaly detection algorithms and we observe that one-class support vector machines constitute the most suitable multivariate technique to reveal attacks, taking into account the requirements in this context. Finally, we propose a classification schema to assist administrators in identifying the types of attacks compromising their networks

    Data Quality Management in Large-Scale Cyber-Physical Systems

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    Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs) are cross-domain, multi-model, advance information systems that play a significant role in many large-scale infrastructure sectors of smart cities public services such as traffic control, smart transportation control, and environmental and noise monitoring systems. Such systems, typically, involve a substantial number of sensor nodes and other devices that stream and exchange data in real-time and usually are deployed in uncontrolled, broad environments. Thus, unexpected measurements may occur due to several internal and external factors, including noise, communication errors, and hardware failures, which may compromise these systems quality of data and raise serious concerns related to safety, reliability, performance, and security. In all cases, these unexpected measurements need to be carefully interpreted and managed based on domain knowledge and computational models. Therefore, in this research, data quality challenges were investigated, and a comprehensive, proof of concept, data quality management system was developed to tackle unaddressed data quality challenges in large-scale CPSs. The data quality management system was designed to address data quality challenges associated with detecting: sensor nodes measurement errors, sensor nodes hardware failures, and mismatches in sensor nodes spatial and temporal contextual attributes. Detecting sensor nodes measurement errors associated with the primary data quality dimensions of accuracy, timeliness, completeness, and consistency in large-scale CPSs were investigated using predictive and anomaly analysis models via utilising statistical and machine-learning techniques. Time-series clustering techniques were investigated as a feasible mean for detecting long-segmental outliers as an indicator of sensor nodes’ continuous halting and incipient hardware failures. Furthermore, the quality of the spatial and temporal contextual attributes of sensor nodes observations was investigated using timestamp analysis techniques. The different components of the data quality management system were tested and calibrated using benchmark time-series collected from a high-quality, temperature sensor network deployed at the University of East London. Furthermore, the effectiveness of the proposed data quality management system was evaluated using a real-world, large-scale environmental monitoring network consisting of more than 200 temperature sensor nodes distributed around London. The data quality management system achieved high accuracy detection rate using LSTM predictive analysis technique and anomaly detection associated with DBSCAN. It successfully identified timeliness and completeness errors in sensor nodes’ measurements using periodicity analysis combined with a rule engine. It achieved up to 100% accuracy in detecting potentially failed sensor nodes using the characteristic-based time-series clustering technique when applied to two days or longer time-series window. Timestamp analysis was adopted effectively for evaluating the quality of temporal and spatial contextual attributes of sensor nodes observations, but only within CPS applications in which using gateway modules is possible

    Identification of Distributed Parameter Systems Based on Sensor Networks

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    A Comprehensive Survey on the Cyber-Security of Smart Grids: Cyber-Attacks, Detection, Countermeasure Techniques, and Future Directions

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    One of the significant challenges that smart grid networks face is cyber-security. Several studies have been conducted to highlight those security challenges. However, the majority of these surveys classify attacks based on the security requirements, confidentiality, integrity, and availability, without taking into consideration the accountability requirement. In addition, some of these surveys focused on the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) model, which does not differentiate between the application, session, and presentation and the data link and physical layers of the Open System Interconnection (OSI) model. In this survey paper, we provide a classification of attacks based on the OSI model and discuss in more detail the cyber-attacks that can target the different layers of smart grid networks communication. We also propose new classifications for the detection and countermeasure techniques and describe existing techniques under each category. Finally, we discuss challenges and future research directions

    QoS-Aware Energy Management and Node Scheduling Schemes for Sensor Network-Based Surveillance Applications

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    Recent advances in wireless technologies have led to an increased deployment of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) for a plethora of diverse surveillance applications such as health, military, and environmental. However, sensor nodes in WSNs usually suffer from short device lifetime due to severe energy constraints and therefore, cannot guarantee to meet the Quality of Service (QoS) needs of various applications. This is proving to be a major hindrance to the widespread adoption of WSNs for such applications. Therefore, to extend the lifetime of WSNs, it is critical to optimize the energy usage in sensor nodes that are often deployed in remote and hostile terrains. To this effect, several energy management schemes have been proposed recently. Node scheduling is one such strategy that can prolong the lifetime of WSNs and also helps to balance the workload among the sensor nodes. In this article, we discuss on the energy management techniques of WSN with a particular emphasis on node scheduling and propose an energy management life-cycle model and an energy conservation pyramid to extend the network lifetime of WSNs. We have provided a detailed classification and evaluation of various node scheduling schemes in terms of their ability to fulfill essential QoS requirements, namely coverage, connectivity, fault tolerance, and security. We considered essential design issues such as network type, deployment pattern, sensing model in the classification process. Furthermore, we have discussed the operational characteristics of schemes with their related merits and demerits. We have compared the efficacy of a few well known graph-based scheduling schemes with suitable performance analysis graph. Finally, we study challenges in designing and implementing node scheduling schemes from a QoS perspective and outline open research problems
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