Litcius/Paper detail

The Day-After-Tomorrow: On the Performance of Radio Fingerprinting over Time

Saeif Alhazbi, Savio Sciancalepore, Gabriele Oligeri

2023Annual Computer Security Applications Conference19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The performance of Radio Frequency (RF) Fingerprinting (RFF) techniques is negatively impacted when the training data is not temporally close to the testing data. This can limit the practical implementation of physical-layer authentication solutions. To circumvent this problem, current solutions involve collecting training and testing datasets at close time intervals—this being detrimental to the real-life deployment of any physical-layer authentication solution. We refer to this issue as the Day-After-Tomorrow (DAT) effect, being widely attributed to the temporal variability of the wireless channel, which masks the physical-layer features of the transmitter, thus impairing the fingerprinting process.

Topics & Concepts

Physical layerAuthentication (law)Computer scienceSoftware deploymentTransmitterWirelessProcess (computing)Layer (electronics)Channel (broadcasting)Radio frequencyLimit (mathematics)Computer networkComputer securityReal-time computingTelecommunicationsChemistryMathematical analysisMathematicsOperating systemOrganic chemistryWireless Signal Modulation ClassificationWireless Communication Security TechniquesHate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection