Classification algorithms have been widely adopted to detect anomalies for various systems, e.g., IoT, cloud and face recognition, under the common assumption that the data source is clean, i.e., features and labels are correctly set. However, data collected from the wild can be unreliable due to careless annotations or malicious data transformation for incorrect anomaly detection. In this paper, we present a two-layer on-line learning framework for robust anomaly detection (RAD) in the presence of unreliable anomaly labels, where the first layer is to filter out the suspicious data, and the second layer detects the anomaly patterns from the remaining data. To adapt to the on-line nature of anomaly detection, we extend RAD with additional features of repetitively cleaning, conflicting opinions of classifiers, and oracle knowledge. We on-line learn from the incoming data streams and continuously cleanse the data, so as to adapt to the increasing learning capacity from the larger accumulated data set. Moreover, we explore the concept of oracle learning that provides additional information of true labels for difficult data points. We specifically focus on three use cases, (i) detecting 10 classes of IoT attacks, (ii) predicting 4 classes of task failures of big data jobs, (iii) recognising 20 celebrities faces. Our evaluation results show that RAD can robustly improve the accuracy of anomaly detection, to reach up to 98% for IoT device attacks (i.e., +11%), up to 84% for cloud task failures (i.e., +20%) under 40% noise, and up to 74% for face recognition (i.e., +28%) under 30% noisy labels. The proposed RAD is general and can be applied to different anomaly detection algorithms.
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are commonly used for image classification tasks, raising the challenge of their application on data flows. During their training, adaptation is often performed by tuning the learning rate. Usual learning rate strategies are time-based i.e. monotonously decreasing. In this paper, we advocate switching to a performance-based adaptation, in order to improve the learning efficiency. We present E (Exponential)/PD (Proportional Derivative)-Control, a conditional learning rate strategy that combines a feedback PD controller based on the CNN loss function, with an exponential control signal to smartly boost the learning and adapt the PD parameters. Stability proof is provided as well as an experimental evaluation using two state of the art image datasets (CIFAR-10 and Fashion-MNIST). Results show better performances than the related works (faster network accuracy growth reaching higher levels) and robustness of the E/PD-Control regarding its parametrization.
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