DocumentCode :
160535
Title :
Dynamic Hierarchical Trust Management of Mobile Groups and Its Application to Misbehaving Node Detection
Author :
Ing-Ray Chen ; Jia Guo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
13-16 May 2014
Firstpage :
49
Lastpage :
56
Abstract :
In military operation or emergency response situations, very frequently a commander will need to assemble and dynamically manage Community of Interest (COI) mobile groups to achieve a critical mission assigned despite failure, disconnection or compromise of COI members. We combine the designs of COI hierarchical management for scalability and reconfigurability with COI dynamic trust management for survivability and intrusion tolerance to compose a scalable, reconfigurable, and survivable COI management protocol for managing COI mission-oriented mobile groups in heterogeneous mobile environments. A COI mobile group in this environment would consist of heterogeneous mobile entities such as communication-device-carried personnel/robots and aerial or ground vehicles operated by humans exhibiting not only quality of service (QoS) characters, e.g., competence and cooperativeness, but also social behaviors, e.g., connectivity, intimacy and honesty. A COI commander or a subtask leader must measure trust with both social and QoS cognition depending on mission task characteristics and/or trustee properties to ensure successful mission execution. In this paper, we present a dynamic hierarchical trust management protocol that can learn from past experiences and adapt to changing environment conditions, e.g., increasing misbehaving node population, evolving hostility and node density, etc. to enhance agility and maximize application performance. With trust-based misbehaving node detection as an application, we demonstrate how our proposed COI trust management protocol is resilient to node failure, disconnection and capture events, and can help maximize application performance in terms of minimizing false negatives and positives in the presence of mobile nodes exhibiting vastly distinct QoS and social behaviors.
Keywords :
emergency services; military communication; mobile computing; protocols; quality of service; telecommunication security; trusted computing; COI dynamic hierarchical trust management protocol; COI mission-oriented mobile group management; aerial vehicles; agility enhancement; application performance maximization; communication-device-carried personnel; community-of-interest mobile groups; competence; connectivity; cooperativeness; emergency response situations; ground vehicles; heterogeneous mobile entities; heterogeneous mobile environments; honesty; intimacy; intrusion tolerance; military operation; misbehaving node population; node density; quality-of-service characters; robots; social behaviors; survivable COI management protocol; trust measurement; trust-based misbehaving node detection; Equations; Mathematical model; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Peer-to-peer computing; Protocols; Quality of service; Trust management; adaptability; community of interest; intrusion detection; performance analysis; scalability;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Information Networking and Applications (AINA), 2014 IEEE 28th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Victoria, BC
ISSN :
1550-445X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3629-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AINA.2014.13
Filename :
6838647
Link To Document :
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