MASc seminar - Chengcheng Pei

Tuesday, July 29, 2014 11:00 am - 11:00 am EDT (GMT -04:00)

Candidate

Chengcheng Pei

Title

Channel-based Physical Layer Authentication

Supervisor

Sherman Shen

Abstract

The characteristics of the wireless physical layer can be exploited to complement and enhance traditional security. In this thesis, we study the channel-based physical layer authentication. The authentication problem is formulated to a sequence of hypothesis test problems. By exploiting the time-of-arrivals, received signal strengths, and cyclic-features of the channels, support vector machine (SVM) based authentication schemes, the linear Fisher discriminant analysis (LFDA) based authentication scheme, and the combining scheme are proposed to improve the detection probability and to reduce the false probability. These schemes can reliably authenticate the sender by identifying channels from different users. In SVM based schemes, the linear and nonlinear SVMs are used to generate classifiers to solve the hypothesis test problems. Using the real channel data measured in a regular office from Utah University, simulation is performed. Simulation results demonstrate that SVM based schemes have lower missing probability and false probability than some existing schemes at cost of extra time complexity and space complexity due to the training stage.

To reduce the space complexity and time complexity during the training stage, LFDA based authentication scheme is proposed. In LFDA based scheme, a linear combination of the channel features is used as the test statistic, which is compared with a threshold to perform authentication. LFDA is used to compute the weights based on some training data. Furthermore, the adaptive threshold scheme (ATS) is proposed to set and adjust the threshold. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed LFDA based scheme performs better in terms of the sum of missing probability and false probability, the receiver operating characteristic curves, and insensitiveness to noise, compared with several existing channel-based authentication schemes. Moreover, the analysis of time complexity and space complexity is provided, which shows that the LFDA based scheme is also better than SVM based schemes in terms of space complexity, time complexity, missing probability, and false probability. The missing probability and false probability can be reduced greatly by two-user co-operative authentication. The combining scheme is proposed to combine the data from another legitimate user when cooperation is available. The combining scheme is proven to have the capacity to improve the performance at cost of extra communication and computation overhead. The time complexity, space complexity, and communication overhead are analyzed.