Biblio

Filters: Author is Fitzek, Frank H. P.  [Clear All Filters]
2023-02-03
Rettlinger, Sebastian, Knaus, Bastian, Wieczorek, Florian, Ivakko, Nikolas, Hanisch, Simon, Nguyen, Giang T., Strufe, Thorsten, Fitzek, Frank H. P..  2022.  MPER - a Motion Profiling Experiment and Research system for human body movement. 2022 IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications Workshops and other Affiliated Events (PerCom Workshops). :88–90.
State-of-the-art approaches in gait analysis usually rely on one isolated tracking system, generating insufficient data for complex use cases such as sports, rehabilitation, and MedTech. We address the opportunity to comprehensively understand human motion by a novel data model combining several motion-tracking methods. The model aggregates pose estimation by captured videos and EMG and EIT sensor data synchronously to gain insights into muscle activities. Our demonstration with biceps curl and sitting/standing pose generates time-synchronous data and delivers insights into our experiment’s usability, advantages, and challenges.
2022-02-22
Acevedo, Javier, Ulbricht, Marian, Gabriel, Jennifer, Fitzek, Frank H. P..  2021.  Hardware Accelerated Cryptography for Tactile Internet. European Wireless 2021; 26th European Wireless Conference. :1—8.
Tactile Internet (TI) applications such as industry automation, connected autonomous cars, augmented reality and remote surgery, are based on secure data transmissions at a very low end-to-end latency. In order to fulfill those requirements in real applications, it is necessary to implement traffic encryption when data flows at higher communication protocol layers. Nevertheless, the implementation of the aforementioned protocols is a computing intensive task, in which many arithmetic operations are involved, leading to considerable delay. Therefore, hardware acceleration may be a solution to reduce the overall computing time, while delivering enough throughput during the execution of the network security functions. In this paper, we implement hardware accelerators for cryptographic algorithms on heterogeneous multicore dedicated hardware, using state-of-the-art embedded libraries, cryptographic cores and hardware extensions. By comparing our implementation to software-only solutions in terms of latency and throughput using variable data sets, we find latency reductions in the computing time around 80% as well as performance improvements up to three orders of magnitude.
2022-06-06
Nguyen, Vu, Cabrera, Juan A., Pandi, Sreekrishna, Nguyen, Giang T., Fitzek, Frank H. P..  2020.  Exploring the Benefits of Memory-Limited Fulcrum Recoding for Heterogeneous Nodes. GLOBECOM 2020 - 2020 IEEE Global Communications Conference. :1–6.
Fulcrum decoders can trade off between computational complexity and the number of received packets. This allows heterogeneous nodes to decode at different level of complexity in accordance with their computing power. Variations of Fulcrum codes, like dynamic sparsity and expansion packets (DSEP) have significantly reduced the encoders and decoders' complexity by using dynamic sparsity and expansion packets. However, limited effort had been done for recoders of Fulcrum codes and their variations, limiting their full potential when being deployed at multi-hop networks. In this paper, we investigate the drawback of the conventional Fulcrum recoding and introduce a novel recoding scheme for the family of Fulcrum codes by limiting the buffer size, and thus memory needs. Our evaluations indicate that DSEP recoding mechamism increases the recoding goodput by 50%, and reduces the decoding overhead by 60%-90% while maintaining high decoding goodput at receivers and small memory usage at recoders compared with the conventional Fulcrum recoding. This further reduces the resources needed for Fulcrum codes at the recoders.
2020-09-21
Osman, Amr, Bruckner, Pascal, Salah, Hani, Fitzek, Frank H. P., Strufe, Thorsten, Fischer, Mathias.  2019.  Sandnet: Towards High Quality of Deception in Container-Based Microservice Architectures. ICC 2019 - 2019 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC). :1–7.
Responding to network security incidents requires interference with ongoing attacks to restore the security of services running on production systems. This approach prevents damage, but drastically impedes the collection of threat intelligence and the analysis of vulnerabilities, exploits, and attack strategies. We propose the live confinement of suspicious microservices into a sandbox network that allows to monitor and analyze ongoing attacks under quarantine and that retains an image of the vulnerable and open production network. A successful sandboxing requires that it happens completely transparent to and cannot be detected by an attacker. Therefore, we introduce a novel metric to measure the Quality of Deception (QoD) and use it to evaluate three proposed network deception mechanisms. Our evaluation results indicate that in our evaluation scenario in best case, an optimal QoD is achieved. In worst case, only a small downtime of approx. 3s per microservice (MS) occurs and thus a momentary drop in QoD to 70.26% before it converges back to optimum as the quarantined services are restored.