Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Eslami, M.  [Clear All Filters]
2018-02-06
Eslami, M., Zheng, G., Eramian, H., Levchuk, G..  2017.  Anomaly Detection on Bipartite Graphs for Cyber Situational Awareness and Threat Detection. 2017 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data). :4741–4743.

Data from cyber logs can often be represented as a bipartite graph (e.g. internal IP-external IP, user-application, or client-server). State-of-the-art graph based anomaly detection often generalizes across all types of graphs — namely bipartite and non-bipartite. This confounds the interpretation and use of specific graph features such as degree, page rank, and eigencentrality that can provide a security analyst with rapid situational awareness of their network. Furthermore, graph algorithms applied to data collected from large, distributed enterprise scale networks require accompanying methods that allow them to scale to the data collected. In this paper, we provide a novel, scalable, directional graph projection framework that operates on cyber logs that can be represented as bipartite graphs. This framework computes directional graph projections and identifies a set of interpretable graph features that describe anomalies within each partite.

2018-01-23
Eslami, M., Zheng, G., Eramian, H., Levchuk, G..  2017.  Deriving cyber use cases from graph projections of cyber data represented as bipartite graphs. 2017 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data). :4658–4663.

Graph analysis can capture relationships between network entities and can be used to identify and rank anomalous hosts, users, or applications from various types of cyber logs. It is often the case that the data in the logs can be represented as a bipartite graph (e.g. internal IP-external IP, user-application, or client-server). State-of-the-art graph based anomaly detection often generalizes across all types of graphs — namely bipartite and non-bipartite. This confounds the interpretation and use of specific graph features such as degree, page rank, and eigencentrality that can provide a security analyst with situational awareness and even insights to potential attacks on enterprise scale networks. Furthermore, graph algorithms applied to data collected from large, distributed enterprise scale networks require accompanying methods that allow them to scale to the data collected. In this paper, we provide a novel, scalable, directional graph projection framework that operates on cyber logs that can be represented as bipartite graphs. We also present methodologies to further narrow returned results to anomalous/outlier cases that may be indicative of a cyber security event. This framework computes directional graph projections and identifies a set of interpretable graph features that describe anomalies within each partite.