14 research outputs found

    An Optimized Medical Image Watermarking Approach for E-Health Applications

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    Background: In recent years, information and communication technologies have been widely used in the healthcare sector. This development enables E-Health applications to transmit medical data, as well as their sharing and remote access by healthcare professionals. However, due to their sensitivity, medical data in general, and medical images in particular, are vulnerable to a variety of illegitimate attacks. Therefore, suitable security and effective protection are necessary during transmission. Method: In consideration of these challenges, we put forth a security system relying on digital watermarking with the aim of ensuring the integrity and authenticity of medical images. The proposed approach is based on Integer Wavelet Transform as an embedding algorithm; furthermore, Particles Swarm Optimization was employed to select the optimal scaling factor, which allows the system to be compatible with different medical imaging modalities. Results: The experimental results demonstrate that the method provides a high imperceptibility and robustness for both secret watermark and watermarked images. In addition, the proposed scheme performs better for medical images compared with similar watermarking algorithms. Conclusion: As it is suitable for a lossless-data application, IWT is the best choice for medical images integrity. Furthermore, using the PSO algorithm enables the algorithm to be compatible with different medical imaging modalities

    Robust watermarking for magnetic resonance images with automatic region of interest detection

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    Medical image watermarking requires special considerations compared to ordinary watermarking methods. The first issue is the detection of an important area of the image called the Region of Interest (ROI) prior to starting the watermarking process. Most existing ROI detection procedures use manual-based methods, while in automated methods the robustness against intentional or unintentional attacks has not been considered extensively. The second issue is the robustness of the embedded watermark against different attacks. A common drawback of existing watermarking methods is their weakness against salt and pepper noise. The research carried out in this thesis addresses these issues of having automatic ROI detection for magnetic resonance images that are robust against attacks particularly the salt and pepper noise and designing a new watermarking method that can withstand high density salt and pepper noise. In the ROI detection part, combinations of several algorithms such as morphological reconstruction, adaptive thresholding and labelling are utilized. The noise-filtering algorithm and window size correction block are then introduced for further enhancement. The performance of the proposed ROI detection is evaluated by computing the Comparative Accuracy (CA). In the watermarking part, a combination of spatial method, channel coding and noise filtering schemes are used to increase the robustness against salt and pepper noise. The quality of watermarked image is evaluated using Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) and Structural Similarity Index (SSIM), and the accuracy of the extracted watermark is assessed in terms of Bit Error Rate (BER). Based on experiments, the CA under eight different attacks (speckle noise, average filter, median filter, Wiener filter, Gaussian filter, sharpening filter, motion, and salt and pepper noise) is between 97.8% and 100%. The CA under different densities of salt and pepper noise (10%-90%) is in the range of 75.13% to 98.99%. In the watermarking part, the performance of the proposed method under different densities of salt and pepper noise measured by total PSNR, ROI PSNR, total SSIM and ROI SSIM has improved in the ranges of 3.48-23.03 (dB), 3.5-23.05 (dB), 0-0.4620 and 0-0.5335 to 21.75-42.08 (dB), 20.55-40.83 (dB), 0.5775-0.8874 and 0.4104-0.9742 respectively. In addition, the BER is reduced to the range of 0.02% to 41.7%. To conclude, the proposed method has managed to significantly improve the performance of existing medical image watermarking methods

    Imperceptibility Analysis for Watermarking Technique Based on Image Block Division Scheme

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    Image watermarking techniques proposed different algorithm schemes to improve performance quality. For a medical image, the watermarking techniques are required to give significant attention to achieve the highest imperceptibility performance to remain visual quality. That is why this paper analyzes two different watermarking algorithm schemes: image block division 88 and image block division 22 to determine the imperceptibility performance for each. Both schemes used the fitness evaluation to evaluate the imperceptibility performance of each embedding location. Thereafter, the imperceptibility, embedding capacity, and watermark data bit error of both schemes were measured. The experiment results show that the image block division 88 scheme outperformed in imperceptibility performance under Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) values for the three different watermarked medical images is 106.1014 to110.5222. The image block division 22 scheme outperformed in embedding capacity and watermark data bit error where the embedding capacity is 1449 to 31953 bit and watermark data bit error is zero for the three different watermarked medical images. This finding indicates that the watermarking technique with image block division 22 scheme can achieve more accurate performance

    Symmetry-Adapted Machine Learning for Information Security

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    Symmetry-adapted machine learning has shown encouraging ability to mitigate the security risks in information and communication technology (ICT) systems. It is a subset of artificial intelligence (AI) that relies on the principles of processing future events by learning past events or historical data. The autonomous nature of symmetry-adapted machine learning supports effective data processing and analysis for security detection in ICT systems without the interference of human authorities. Many industries are developing machine-learning-adapted solutions to support security for smart hardware, distributed computing, and the cloud. In our Special Issue book, we focus on the deployment of symmetry-adapted machine learning for information security in various application areas. This security approach can support effective methods to handle the dynamic nature of security attacks by extraction and analysis of data to identify hidden patterns of data. The main topics of this Issue include malware classification, an intrusion detection system, image watermarking, color image watermarking, battlefield target aggregation behavior recognition model, IP camera, Internet of Things (IoT) security, service function chain, indoor positioning system, and crypto-analysis

    Optimization of medical image steganography using n-decomposition genetic algorithm

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    Protecting patients' confidential information is a critical concern in medical image steganography. The Least Significant Bits (LSB) technique has been widely used for secure communication. However, it is susceptible to imperceptibility and security risks due to the direct manipulation of pixels, and ASCII patterns present limitations. Consequently, sensitive medical information is subject to loss or alteration. Despite attempts to optimize LSB, these issues persist due to (1) the formulation of the optimization suffering from non-valid implicit constraints, causing inflexibility in reaching optimal embedding, (2) lacking convergence in the searching process, where the message length significantly affects the size of the solution space, and (3) issues of application customizability where different data require more flexibility in controlling the embedding process. To overcome these limitations, this study proposes a technique known as an n-decomposition genetic algorithm. This algorithm uses a variable-length search to identify the best location to embed the secret message by incorporating constraints to avoid local minimum traps. The methodology consists of five main phases: (1) initial investigation, (2) formulating an embedding scheme, (3) constructing a decomposition scheme, (4) integrating the schemes' design into the proposed technique, and (5) evaluating the proposed technique's performance based on parameters using medical datasets from kaggle.com. The proposed technique showed resistance to statistical analysis evaluated using Reversible Statistical (RS) analysis and histogram. It also demonstrated its superiority in imperceptibility and security measured by MSE and PSNR to Chest and Retina datasets (0.0557, 0.0550) and (60.6696, 60.7287), respectively. Still, compared to the results obtained by the proposed technique, the benchmark outperforms the Brain dataset due to the homogeneous nature of the images and the extensive black background. This research has contributed to genetic-based decomposition in medical image steganography and provides a technique that offers improved security without compromising efficiency and convergence. However, further validation is required to determine its effectiveness in real-world applications

    AuSR2: Image watermarking technique for authentication and self-recovery with image texture preservation

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    This paper presents an image watermarking technique for authentication and self-recovery called AuSR2. The AuSR2 scheme partitions the cover image into 3 × 3 non-overlapping blocks. The watermark data is embedded into two Least Significant Bit (LSB), consisting of two authentication bits and 16 recovery bits for each block. The texture of each block is preserved in the recovery data. Thus, each tampered pixel can be recovered independently instead of using the average block. The recovery process may introduce the tamper coincidence problem, which can be solved using image inpainting. The AuSR2 implements the LSB shifting algorithm to increase the imperceptibility by 2.8%. The experimental results confirm that the AuSR2 can accurately detect the tampering area up to 100%. The AuSR2 can recover the tampered image with a PSNR value of 38.11 dB under a 10% tampering rate. The comparative analysis proves the superiority of the AuSR2 compared to the existing scheme

    Multimodal Biometric Systems for Personal Identification and Authentication using Machine and Deep Learning Classifiers

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    Multimodal biometrics, using machine and deep learning, has recently gained interest over single biometric modalities. This interest stems from the fact that this technique improves recognition and, thus, provides more security. In fact, by combining the abilities of single biometrics, the fusion of two or more biometric modalities creates a robust recognition system that is resistant to the flaws of individual modalities. However, the excellent recognition of multimodal systems depends on multiple factors, such as the fusion scheme, fusion technique, feature extraction techniques, and classification method. In machine learning, existing works generally use different algorithms for feature extraction of modalities, which makes the system more complex. On the other hand, deep learning, with its ability to extract features automatically, has made recognition more efficient and accurate. Studies deploying deep learning algorithms in multimodal biometric systems tried to find a good compromise between the false acceptance and the false rejection rates (FAR and FRR) to choose the threshold in the matching step. This manual choice is not optimal and depends on the expertise of the solution designer, hence the need to automatize this step. From this perspective, the second part of this thesis details an end-to-end CNN algorithm with an automatic matching mechanism. This thesis has conducted two studies on face and iris multimodal biometric recognition. The first study proposes a new feature extraction technique for biometric systems based on machine learning. The iris and facial features extraction is performed using the Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) combined with the Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). Merging the relevant characteristics of the two modalities is used to create a pattern for an individual in the dataset. The experimental results show the robustness of our proposed technique and the efficiency when using the same feature extraction technique for both modalities. The proposed method outperformed the state-of-the-art and gave an accuracy of 98.90%. The second study proposes a deep learning approach using DensNet121 and FaceNet for iris and faces multimodal recognition using feature-level fusion and a new automatic matching technique. The proposed automatic matching approach does not use the threshold to ensure a better compromise between performance and FAR and FRR errors. However, it uses a trained multilayer perceptron (MLP) model that allows people’s automatic classification into two classes: recognized and unrecognized. This platform ensures an accurate and fully automatic process of multimodal recognition. The results obtained by the DenseNet121-FaceNet model by adopting feature-level fusion and automatic matching are very satisfactory. The proposed deep learning models give 99.78% of accuracy, and 99.56% of precision, with 0.22% of FRR and without FAR errors. The proposed and developed platform solutions in this thesis were tested and vali- dated in two different case studies, the central pharmacy of Al-Asria Eye Clinic in Dubai and the Abu Dhabi Police General Headquarters (Police GHQ). The solution allows fast identification of the persons authorized to access the different rooms. It thus protects the pharmacy against any medication abuse and the red zone in the military zone against the unauthorized use of weapons

    Intelligent Circuits and Systems

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    ICICS-2020 is the third conference initiated by the School of Electronics and Electrical Engineering at Lovely Professional University that explored recent innovations of researchers working for the development of smart and green technologies in the fields of Energy, Electronics, Communications, Computers, and Control. ICICS provides innovators to identify new opportunities for the social and economic benefits of society.  This conference bridges the gap between academics and R&D institutions, social visionaries, and experts from all strata of society to present their ongoing research activities and foster research relations between them. It provides opportunities for the exchange of new ideas, applications, and experiences in the field of smart technologies and finding global partners for future collaboration. The ICICS-2020 was conducted in two broad categories, Intelligent Circuits & Intelligent Systems and Emerging Technologies in Electrical Engineering

    Recent Advances in Signal Processing

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    The signal processing task is a very critical issue in the majority of new technological inventions and challenges in a variety of applications in both science and engineering fields. Classical signal processing techniques have largely worked with mathematical models that are linear, local, stationary, and Gaussian. They have always favored closed-form tractability over real-world accuracy. These constraints were imposed by the lack of powerful computing tools. During the last few decades, signal processing theories, developments, and applications have matured rapidly and now include tools from many areas of mathematics, computer science, physics, and engineering. This book is targeted primarily toward both students and researchers who want to be exposed to a wide variety of signal processing techniques and algorithms. It includes 27 chapters that can be categorized into five different areas depending on the application at hand. These five categories are ordered to address image processing, speech processing, communication systems, time-series analysis, and educational packages respectively. The book has the advantage of providing a collection of applications that are completely independent and self-contained; thus, the interested reader can choose any chapter and skip to another without losing continuity

    Applied Metaheuristic Computing

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    For decades, Applied Metaheuristic Computing (AMC) has been a prevailing optimization technique for tackling perplexing engineering and business problems, such as scheduling, routing, ordering, bin packing, assignment, facility layout planning, among others. This is partly because the classic exact methods are constrained with prior assumptions, and partly due to the heuristics being problem-dependent and lacking generalization. AMC, on the contrary, guides the course of low-level heuristics to search beyond the local optimality, which impairs the capability of traditional computation methods. This topic series has collected quality papers proposing cutting-edge methodology and innovative applications which drive the advances of AMC
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