Litcius/Paper detail

A Systematic Review of Bio-Cyber Interface Technologies and Security Issues for Internet of Bio-Nano Things

Sidra Zafar, Mohsin Nazir, Taimur Bakhshi, Hasan Ali Khattak, Sarmadullah Khan, Muhammad Bilal, Kim‐Kwang Raymond Choo, Kyung Sup Kwak, Aneeqa Sabah

2021IEEE Access70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Advances in synthetic biology and nanotechnology have contributed to the design of tools that can be used to control, reuse, modify, and re-engineer cells' structure, as well as enabling engineers to effectively use biological cells as programmable substrates to realize Bio-NanoThings (biological embedded computing devices). Bio-NanoThings are generally tiny, non-intrusive, and concealable devices that can be used for in-vivo applications such as intra-body sensing and actuation networks, where the use of artificial devices can be detrimental. Such (nano-scale) devices can be used in various healthcare settings such as continuous health monitoring, targeted drug delivery, and nano-surgeries. These services can also be grouped to form a collaborative network (i.e., nanonetwork), whose performance can potentially be improved when connected to higher bandwidth external networks such as the Internet, say via 5G. However, to realize the IoBNT paradigm, it is also important to seamlessly connect the biological environment with the technological landscape by having a dynamic interface design to convert biochemical signals from the human body into an equivalent electromagnetic signal (and vice versa). This, unfortunately, risks the exposure of internal biological mechanisms to cyber-based sensing and medical actuation, with potential security and privacy implications. This paper comprehensively reviews bio-cyber interface for IoBNT architecture, focusing on bio-cyber interfacing options for IoBNT like biologically inspired bio-electronic devices, RFID enabled implantable chips, and electronic tattoos. This study also identifies known and potential security and privacy vulnerabilities and mitigation strategies for consideration in future IoBNT designs and implementations.

Topics & Concepts

InterfacingComputer scienceImplementationReuseInterface (matter)The InternetCyber-physical systemEmbedded systemComputer securityEngineeringWorld Wide WebSoftware engineeringComputer hardwareWaste managementOperating systemMaximum bubble pressure methodParallel computingBubbleMolecular Communication and NanonetworksWireless Body Area NetworksNeuroscience and Neural Engineering