Specific Emitter Identification (SEI) is a key research problem in the field of information countermeasures. It is one of the key technologies required to be solved urgently in the target reconnaissance system. It has the ability to distinguish between different individual radiation sources according to the varying individual characteristics of the emitter hardware within the transmitted signals. In response to the lack of scarcity among labeled samples in specific emitter identification, this paper proposes a method combining multi-domain feature fusion and integrated learning (MDFFIL). First, the received signal is preprocessed to obtain segmented time domain signal samples. Then, the signal is converted to time–frequency distribution using wavelet transform. Afterwards, an integrated learning two-stage recognition classification method is designed to extract data features of 1D time domain signals and 2D time–frequency distribution signals using the symmetry network structures of CVResNet and ResNet. Finally, fused features are fed into the complex-valued residual network classifier to obtain the final classification results. We demonstrate through the analysis results of the measured data that the proposed method has a higher accuracy as compared with the classical feature extraction method, and that this can improve the identification of communication radiation sources with fewer labeled samples.
The Internet of Things (IoT) is promising to transform a wide range of fields. However, the open nature of IoT makes it exposed to cybersecurity threats, among which identity spoofing is a typical example. Physical layer authentication, which identifies IoT devices based on the physical layer characteristics of signals, serves as an effective way to counteract identity spoofing. In this paper, we propose a deep learning-based framework for the open-set authentication of IoT devices. Specifically, additive angular margin softmax (AAMSoftmax) was utilized to enhance the discriminability of learned features and a modified OpenMAX classifier was employed to adaptively identify authorized devices and distinguish unauthorized ones. The experimental results for both simulated data and real ADS–B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance–Broadcast) data indicate that our framework achieved superior performance compared to current approaches, especially when the number of devices used for training is limited.
Knowledge graphs are structured representations of real world facts. However, they typically contain only a small subset of all possible facts. Link prediction is the task of inferring missing facts based on existing ones. Knowledge graph embedding, representing entities and relations in the knowledge graphs with high-dimensional vectors, has made significant progress in link prediction. The tensor decomposition models are an embedding family with good performance in link prediction. The previous tensor decomposition models do not consider the problem of attribute separation. These models mainly explore particular regularization to improve performance. No matter how sophisticated the design of tensor decomposition models is, the performance is theoretically under the basic tensor decomposition model. Moreover, the unnoticed task of attribute separation in the traditional models is just handed over to the training. However, the amount of parameters for this task is tremendous, and the model is prone to overfitting. We investigate the design approaching the theoretical performance of tensor decomposition models in this paper. The observation that measuring the rationality of specific triples means comparing the matching degree of the specific attributes associated with the relations is well-known. Therefore, the comparison of actual triples needs first to separate specific attribute dimensions, which is ignored by existing models. Inspired by this observation, we design a novel tensor ecomposition model based on Separating Attribute space for knowledge graph completion (SeAttE). The major novelty of this paper is that SeAttE is the first model among the tensor decomposition family to consider the attribute space separation task. Furthermore, SeAttE transforms the learning of too many parameters for the attribute space separation task into the structure’s design. This operation allows the model to focus on learning the semantic equivalence between relations, causing the performance to approach the theoretical limit. We also prove that RESCAL, DisMult and ComplEx are special cases of SeAttE in this paper. Furthermore, we classify existing tensor decomposition models for subsequent researchers. Experiments on the benchmark datasets show that SeAttE has achieved state-of-the-art among tensor decomposition models.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.