2 research outputs found

    Intelligent intrusion detection through deep autoencoder and stacked long short-term memory

    Get PDF
    In the realm of network intrusion detection, the escalating complexity and diversity of cyber threats necessitate innovative approaches to enhance detection accuracy. This study introduces an integrated solution leveraging deep learning techniques for improved intrusion detection. The proposed framework consists on a deep autoencoder for feature extraction, and a stacked long short-term memory (LSTM) network ensemble for classification. The deep autoencoder compresses raw network data, extracting salient features and mitigating noise. Subsequently, the stacked LSTM ensemble captures intricate temporal dependencies, correcting anomaly detection precision. Experiments conducted on the UNSW-NB15 dataset, and a benchmark in intrusion detection validate the effectiveness of the approach. The solution achieves an accuracy of 90.59%, with precision, recall, and F1-Score metrics reaching 90.65, 90.59, and 90.57, respectively. Notably, the framework outperforms standalone models and demonstrates the advantage of synergizing deep autoencoder-driven feature extraction with the stacked LSTM ensemble. Furthermore, a binary classification experiment attains an accuracy of about 90.59%, surpassing the multiclass classification and affirming the model's potential for binary threat identification. Comparative analyses highlight the pivotal role of feature extraction, while experimentation illustrates the enhancement achieved by incorporating the synergistic deep autoencoder-Stacked LSTM approach
    corecore