A Multimodal Network Security Framework for Healthcare Based on Deep Learning.
Qiang Qiang ChenJian Ping LiAmin Ul HaqBless Lord Y AgbleyArif HussainInayat KhanRiaz Ullah KhanJalaluddin KhanIjaz AliPublished in: Computational intelligence and neuroscience (2023)
As the network is closely related to people's daily life, network security has become an important factor affecting the physical and mental health of human beings. Network flow classification is the foundation of network security. It is the basis for providing various network services such as network security maintenance, network monitoring, and network quality of service (QoS). Therefore, this field has always been a hot spot of academic and industrial research. Existing studies have shown that through appropriate data preprocessing techniques, machine learning methods can be used to classify network flows, most of which, however, are based on manually and expert-originated feature sets; it is a time-consuming and laborious work. Moreover, only features extracted by a single model can be used in classification tasks, which can easily make the model inefficient and prone to overfitting. In order to solve the abovementioned problems, this study proposes a multimodal automatic analysis framework based on spatial and sequential features. The framework is completely based on the deep learning method and realizes automatic extraction of two types of features, which is very suitable for processing large-flow information; this improves the efficiency of network flow classification. There are two types of frameworks based on pretraining and joint-training, respectively, with analyzing the advantages and disadvantages of them in practice. In terms of evaluation, compared with the previous methods, the experimental results show that the framework has good performance in both accuracy and stability.