DocumentCode
12712
Title
SPOC: A Secure and Privacy-Preserving Opportunistic Computing Framework for Mobile-Healthcare Emergency
Author
Rongxing Lu ; Xiaodong Lin ; Xuemin Shen
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada
Volume
24
Issue
3
fYear
2013
fDate
Mar-13
Firstpage
614
Lastpage
624
Abstract
With the pervasiveness of smart phones and the advance of wireless body sensor networks (BSNs), mobile Healthcare (m-Healthcare), which extends the operation of Healthcare provider into a pervasive environment for better health monitoring, has attracted considerable interest recently. However, the flourish of m-Healthcare still faces many challenges including information security and privacy preservation. In this paper, we propose a secure and privacy-preserving opportunistic computing framework, called SPOC, for m-Healthcare emergency. With SPOC, smart phone resources including computing power and energy can be opportunistically gathered to process the computing-intensive personal health information (PHI) during m-Healthcare emergency with minimal privacy disclosure. In specific, to leverage the PHI privacy disclosure and the high reliability of PHI process and transmission in m-Healthcare emergency, we introduce an efficient user-centric privacy access control in SPOC framework, which is based on an attribute-based access control and a new privacy-preserving scalar product computation (PPSPC) technique, and allows a medical user to decide who can participate in the opportunistic computing to assist in processing his overwhelming PHI data. Detailed security analysis shows that the proposed SPOC framework can efficiently achieve user-centric privacy access control in m-Healthcare emergency. In addition, performance evaluations via extensive simulations demonstrate the SPOC´s effectiveness in term of providing high-reliable-PHI process and transmission while minimizing the privacy disclosure during m-Healthcare emergency.
Keywords
authorisation; body sensor networks; data privacy; health care; medical information systems; mobile computing; smart phones; BSN; PHI privacy disclosure; PHI process reliability; PPSPC technique; SPOC framework; attribute-based access control; computing energy; computing power; computing-intensive personal health information; health monitoring; healthcare provider; high-reliable-PHI process; high-reliable-PHI transmission; m-Healthcare emergency; medical user; minimal privacy disclosure; mobile healthcare emergency; opportunistic computing; performance evaluations; pervasive environment; privacy-preserving scalar product computation technique; secure and privacy-preserving opportunistic computing framework; security analysis; smart phone pervasiveness; smart phone resources; user-centric privacy access control; wireless body sensor networks; Access control; Medical services; Monitoring; Privacy; Protocols; Reliability; Smart phones; Mobile-healthcare emergency; PPSPC; opportunistic computing; user-centric privacy access control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPDS.2012.146
Filename
6200265
Link To Document