A Genetic-Based Extreme Gradient Boosting Model for Detecting Intrusions in Wireless Sensor Networks.

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ID: 88125
2019
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Abstract
An Intrusion detection system is an essential security tool for protecting services and infrastructures of wireless sensor networks from unseen and unpredictable attacks. Few works of machine learning have been proposed for intrusion detection in wireless sensor networks and that have achieved reasonable results. However, these works still need to be more accurate and efficient against imbalanced data problems in network traffic. In this paper, we proposed a new model to detect intrusion attacks based on a genetic algorithm and an extreme gradient boosting (XGBoot) classifier, called GXGBoost model. The latter is a gradient boosting model designed for improving the performance of traditional models to detect minority classes of attacks in the highly imbalanced data traffic of wireless sensor networks. A set of experiments were conducted on wireless sensor network-detection system (WSN-DS) dataset using holdout and 10 fold cross validation techniques. The results of 10 fold cross validation tests revealed that the proposed approach outperformed the state-of-the-art approaches and other ensemble learning classifiers with high detection rates of 98.2%, 92.9%, 98.9%, and 99.5% for flooding, scheduling, grayhole, and blackhole attacks, respectively, in addition to 99.9% for normal traffic.
Reference Key
alqahtani2019asensors Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Alqahtani, Mnahi;Gumaei, Abdu;Mathkour, Hassan;Maher Ben Ismail, Mohamed;
Journal sensors
Year 2019
DOI
E4383
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