A Probabilistic Diffusion Scheme for Anomaly Detection on Smartphones

Abstract

Widespread use and general purpose computing capabilities of next generation smartphones make them the next big targets of malicious software (malware) and security attacks. Given the battery, computing power, and band-width limitations inherent to such mobile devices, detection of malware on them is a research challenge that requires a different approach than the ones used for desktop/laptop computing. We present a novel probabilistic diffusion scheme for detecting anomalies possibly indicating malware which is based on device usage patterns. The relationship between samples of normal behavior and their features are modeled through a bipartite graph which constitutes the basis for the stochastic diffusion process. Subsequently, we establish an indirect similarity measure among sample points. The diffusion kernel derived over the feature space together with the Kullback-Leibler divergence over the sample space provide an anomaly detection algorithm. We demonstrate its applicability in two settings using real world mobile phone data. Initial experiments indicate that the diffusion algorithm outperforms others even under limited training data availability.

@inproceedings{bauckhage:2010:,
author = {Christian Bauckhage and Tansu Alpcan and Aubrey-Derrick Schmidt},
title = {A Probabilistic Diffusion Scheme for Anomaly Detection on Smartphones},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop in Information Security Theory and Practice 2010 (WISTP'10)},
year = {2010},
pages = {31--46},
ee = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12368-9_3},
isbn = {978-3642123672}, 
location = {Passau, Germany},
publisher = {Springer},
series    = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
}
Authors:
Christian Bauckhage, Tansu Alpcan, Aubrey-Derrick Schmidt
Category:
Conference Paper
Year:
2010
Location:
Fourth International Workshop in Information Security Theory and Practice 2010 (WISTP'10), Passau, Germany