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[Author] Jun'ichi TAKEUCHI(3hit)

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  • Real-Time Detection of Global Cyberthreat Based on Darknet by Estimating Anomalous Synchronization Using Graphical Lasso

    Chansu HAN  Jumpei SHIMAMURA  Takeshi TAKAHASHI  Daisuke INOUE  Jun'ichi TAKEUCHI  Koji NAKAO  

     
    PAPER-Information Network

      Pubricized:
    2020/06/25
      Vol:
    E103-D No:10
      Page(s):
    2113-2124

    With the rapid evolution and increase of cyberthreats in recent years, it is necessary to detect and understand it promptly and precisely to reduce the impact of cyberthreats. A darknet, which is an unused IP address space, has a high signal-to-noise ratio, so it is easier to understand the global tendency of malicious traffic in cyberspace than other observation networks. In this paper, we aim to capture global cyberthreats in real time. Since multiple hosts infected with similar malware tend to perform similar behavior, we propose a system that estimates a degree of synchronizations from the patterns of packet transmission time among the source hosts observed in unit time of the darknet and detects anomalies in real time. In our evaluation, we perform our proof-of-concept implementation of the proposed engine to demonstrate its feasibility and effectiveness, and we detect cyberthreats with an accuracy of 97.14%. This work is the first practical trial that detects cyberthreats from in-the-wild darknet traffic regardless of new types and variants in real time, and it quantitatively evaluates the result.

  • Mitigate: Toward Comprehensive Research and Development for Analyzing and Combating IoT Malware

    Koji NAKAO  Katsunari YOSHIOKA  Takayuki SASAKI  Rui TANABE  Xuping HUANG  Takeshi TAKAHASHI  Akira FUJITA  Jun'ichi TAKEUCHI  Noboru MURATA  Junji SHIKATA  Kazuki IWAMOTO  Kazuki TAKADA  Yuki ISHIDA  Masaru TAKEUCHI  Naoto YANAI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2023/06/08
      Vol:
    E106-D No:9
      Page(s):
    1302-1315

    In this paper, we developed the latest IoT honeypots to capture IoT malware currently on the loose, analyzed IoT malware with new features such as persistent infection, developed malware removal methods to be provided to IoT device users. Furthermore, as attack behaviors using IoT devices become more diverse and sophisticated every year, we conducted research related to various factors involved in understanding the overall picture of attack behaviors from the perspective of incident responders. As the final stage of countermeasures, we also conducted research and development of IoT malware disabling technology to stop only IoT malware activities in IoT devices and IoT system disabling technology to remotely control (including stopping) IoT devices themselves.

  • Brain Tumor Classification using Under-Sampled k-Space Data: A Deep Learning Approach

    Tania SULTANA  Sho KUROSAKI  Yutaka JITSUMATSU  Shigehide KUHARA  Jun'ichi TAKEUCHI  

     
    PAPER-Artificial Intelligence, Data Mining

      Pubricized:
    2023/08/15
      Vol:
    E106-D No:11
      Page(s):
    1831-1841

    We assess how well the recently created MRI reconstruction technique, Multi-Resolution Convolutional Neural Network (MRCNN), performs in the core medical vision field (classification). The primary goal of MRCNN is to identify the best k-space undersampling patterns to accelerate the MRI. In this study, we use the Figshare brain tumor dataset for MRI classification with 3064 T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI (CE-MRI) over three categories: meningioma, glioma, and pituitary tumors. We apply MRCNN to the dataset, which is a method to reconstruct high-quality images from under-sampled k-space signals. Next, we employ the pre-trained VGG16 model, which is a Deep Neural Network (DNN) based image classifier to the MRCNN restored MRIs to classify the brain tumors. Our experiments showed that in the case of MRCNN restored data, the proposed brain tumor classifier achieved 92.79% classification accuracy for a 10% sampling rate, which is slightly higher than that of SRCNN, MoDL, and Zero-filling methods have 91.89%, 91.89%, and 90.98% respectively. Note that our classifier was trained using the dataset consisting of the images with full sampling and their labels, which can be regarded as a model of the usual human diagnostician. Hence our results would suggest MRCNN is useful for human diagnosis. In conclusion, MRCNN significantly enhances the accuracy of the brain tumor classification system based on the tumor location using under-sampled k-space signals.