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2020-08-28
Mulinka, Pavol, Casas, Pedro, Vanerio, Juan.  2019.  Continuous and Adaptive Learning over Big Streaming Data for Network Security. 2019 IEEE 8th International Conference on Cloud Networking (CloudNet). :1—4.

Continuous and adaptive learning is an effective learning approach when dealing with highly dynamic and changing scenarios, where concept drift often happens. In a continuous, stream or adaptive learning setup, new measurements arrive continuously and there are no boundaries for learning, meaning that the learning model has to decide how and when to (re)learn from these new data constantly. We address the problem of adaptive and continual learning for network security, building dynamic models to detect network attacks in real network traffic. The combination of fast and big network measurements data with the re-training paradigm of adaptive learning imposes complex challenges in terms of data processing speed, which we tackle by relying on big data platforms for parallel stream processing. We build and benchmark different adaptive learning models on top of a novel big data analytics platform for network traffic monitoring and analysis tasks, and show that high speed-up computations (as high as × 6) can be achieved by parallelizing off-the-shelf stream learning approaches.

2019-03-06
Mito, M., Murata, K., Eguchi, D., Mori, Y., Toyonaga, M..  2018.  A Data Reconstruction Method for The Big-Data Analysis. 2018 9th International Conference on Awareness Science and Technology (iCAST). :319-323.
In recent years, the big-data approach has become important within various business operations and sales judgment tactics. Contrarily, numerous privacy problems limit the progress of their analysis technologies. To mitigate such problems, this paper proposes several privacy-preserving methods, i.e., anonymization, extreme value record elimination, fully encrypted analysis, and so on. However, privacy-cracking fears still remain that prevent the open use of big-data by other, external organizations. We propose a big-data reconstruction method that does not intrinsically use privacy data. The method uses only the statistical features of big-data, i.e., its attribute histograms and their correlation coefficients. To verify whether valuable information can be extracted using this method, we evaluate the data by using Self Organizing Map (SOM) as one of the big-data analysis tools. The results show that the same pieces of information are extracted from our data and the big-data.
2017-12-12
Bertino, E., Kantarcioglu, M..  2017.  A Cyber-Provenance Infrastructure for Sensor-Based Data-Intensive Applications. 2017 IEEE International Conference on Information Reuse and Integration (IRI). :108–114.

Summary form only given. Strong light-matter coupling has been recently successfully explored in the GHz and THz [1] range with on-chip platforms. New and intriguing quantum optical phenomena have been predicted in the ultrastrong coupling regime [2], when the coupling strength Ω becomes comparable to the unperturbed frequency of the system ω. We recently proposed a new experimental platform where we couple the inter-Landau level transition of an high-mobility 2DEG to the highly subwavelength photonic mode of an LC meta-atom [3] showing very large Ω/ωc = 0.87. Our system benefits from the collective enhancement of the light-matter coupling which comes from the scaling of the coupling Ω ∝ √n, were n is the number of optically active electrons. In our previous experiments [3] and in literature [4] this number varies from 104-103 electrons per meta-atom. We now engineer a new cavity, resonant at 290 GHz, with an extremely reduced effective mode surface Seff = 4 × 10-14 m2 (FE simulations, CST), yielding large field enhancements above 1500 and allowing to enter the few (textless;100) electron regime. It consist of a complementary metasurface with two very sharp metallic tips separated by a 60 nm gap (Fig.1(a, b)) on top of a single triangular quantum well. THz-TDS transmission experiments as a function of the applied magnetic field reveal strong anticrossing of the cavity mode with linear cyclotron dispersion. Measurements for arrays of only 12 cavities are reported in Fig.1(c). On the top horizontal axis we report the number of electrons occupying the topmost Landau level as a function of the magnetic field. At the anticrossing field of B=0.73 T we measure approximately 60 electrons ultra strongly coupled (Ω/ω- textbartextbar