Researcher profile

Burak Kantarci

Burak Kantarci contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Stochastic Modeling of Human-Machine Authentication Channels under Partial Information Leakage

Reliable and secure human-machine communication is fundamental to IoT and cyber-physical ecosystems, where smartphones and wearables commonly serve as authentication controllers. PIN-based authentication can be viewed as a low-bandwidth communication channel through which users transmit numeric credentials under practical constraints. However, conventional evaluations adopt a binary view of security-treating such channels as either fully secure or fully compromised-thereby overlooking the progressive reliability degradation caused by partial information leakage in real-world IoT settings. In this paper, we model the PIN entry process as a stochastic human-IoT communication system and propose a context-conditioned probabilistic inference framework to quantify reliability loss and Quality-of-Service degradation under partial symbol exposure. The proposed approach treats missing digits as latent variables and estimates them using smoothed conditional probability distributions with fallback priors. Unlike traditional sequential models that assume contiguous positional dependencies, the method does not explicitly parameterize hidden-state transitions or emissions; instead, it performs context-driven probabilistic inference to approximate latent dependencies across digit positions. Using over one million real-world four-digit PIN samples, we evaluate single-, double-, and triple-digit leakage scenarios and derive position-dependent reliability metrics. The proposed model achieves up to 55.31% prediction accuracy for one missing digit and 12.12% for three missing digits, while consistently outperforming a standard sequence-model baseline and classical machine learning models in terms of precision, recall, and F1-score. These results formalize PIN entry as a noisy human--IoT communication channel and demonstrate substantial reliability degradation under realistic partial exposure conditions.

preprint2026arXiv

Toward Resilient 5G Networks: Comparative Analysis of Federated and Centralized Learning for RF Jamming Detection

Jamming attacks are proliferating and pose a significant threat to the security of 5G and beyond networks. These attacks target 5G radio frequency (RF) domain and can disrupt the communication in wireless networks. While conventional machine learning and deep learning approaches demonstrate its potential for jamming detection, they typically require centralized data collection, compromising the privacy of user equipment (UEs). This work proposes a federated learning (FL)-based jamming detection framework that operates on over-the-air In-phase and Quadrature (IQ) samples extracted from Synchronization Signal Blocks (SSBs) in the RF domain. The framework enables collaborative model training across multiple UEs without sharing raw RF signal data. We adopt Federated Averaging (FedAvg) algorithm to train a 1D convolutional neural network (1DCNN) for effective detection of attacks. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed FL framework achieves 97% accuracy and 97% F1-score, outperforming centralized baselines including MLP, 1DCNN, SVM, and logistic regression, while preserving the data privacy of all participating UEs

preprint2022arXiv

Generative Adversarial Network-Driven Detection of Adversarial Tasks in Mobile Crowdsensing

Mobile Crowdsensing systems are vulnerable to various attacks as they build on non-dedicated and ubiquitous properties. Machine learning (ML)-based approaches are widely investigated to build attack detection systems and ensure MCS systems security. However, adversaries that aim to clog the sensing front-end and MCS back-end leverage intelligent techniques, which are challenging for MCS platform and service providers to develop appropriate detection frameworks against these attacks. Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have been applied to generate synthetic samples, that are extremely similar to the real ones, deceiving classifiers such that the synthetic samples are indistinguishable from the originals. Previous works suggest that GAN-based attacks exhibit more crucial devastation than empirically designed attack samples, and result in low detection rate at the MCS platform. With this in mind, this paper aims to detect intelligently designed illegitimate sensing service requests by integrating a GAN-based model. To this end, we propose a two-level cascading classifier that combines the GAN discriminator with a binary classifier to prevent adversarial fake tasks. Through simulations, we compare our results to a single-level binary classifier, and the numeric results show that proposed approach raises Adversarial Attack Detection Rate (AADR), from $0\%$ to $97.5\%$ by KNN/NB, from $45.9\%$ to $100\%$ by Decision Tree. Meanwhile, with two-levels classifiers, Original Attack Detection Rate (OADR) improves for the three binary classifiers, with comparison, such as NB from $26.1\%$ to $61.5\%$.

preprint2022arXiv

Table Structure Recognition with Conditional Attention

Tabular data in digital documents is widely used to express compact and important information for readers. However, it is challenging to parse tables from unstructured digital documents, such as PDFs and images, into machine-readable format because of the complexity of table structures and the missing of meta-information. Table Structure Recognition (TSR) problem aims to recognize the structure of a table and transform the unstructured tables into a structured and machine-readable format so that the tabular data can be further analysed by the down-stream tasks, such as semantic modeling and information retrieval. In this study, we hypothesize that a complicated table structure can be represented by a graph whose vertices and edges represent the cells and association between cells, respectively. Then we define the table structure recognition problem as a cell association classification problem and propose a conditional attention network (CATT-Net). The experimental results demonstrate the superiority of our proposed method over the state-of-the-art methods on various datasets. Besides, we investigate whether the alignment of a cell bounding box or a text-focused approach has more impact on the model performance. Due to the lack of public dataset annotations based on these two approaches, we further annotate the ICDAR2013 dataset providing both types of bounding boxes, which can be a new benchmark dataset for evaluating the methods in this field. Experimental results show that the alignment of a cell bounding box can help improve the Micro-averaged F1 score from 0.915 to 0.963, and the Macro-average F1 score from 0.787 to 0.923.

preprint2020arXiv

A Comparative Study of AI-based Intrusion Detection Techniques in Critical Infrastructures

Volunteer computing uses Internet-connected devices (laptops, PCs, smart devices, etc.), in which their owners volunteer them as storage and computing power resources, has become an essential mechanism for resource management in numerous applications. The growth of the volume and variety of data traffic in the Internet leads to concerns on the robustness of cyberphysical systems especially for critical infrastructures. Therefore, the implementation of an efficient Intrusion Detection System for gathering such sensory data has gained vital importance. In this paper, we present a comparative study of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-driven intrusion detection systems for wirelessly connected sensors that track crucial applications. Specifically, we present an in-depth analysis of the use of machine learning, deep learning and reinforcement learning solutions to recognize intrusive behavior in the collected traffic. We evaluate the proposed mechanisms by using KD'99 as real attack data-set in our simulations. Results present the performance metrics for three different IDSs namely the Adaptively Supervised and Clustered Hybrid IDS (ASCH-IDS), Restricted Boltzmann Machine-based Clustered IDS (RBC-IDS) and Q-learning based IDS (QL-IDS) to detect malicious behaviors. We also present the performance of different reinforcement learning techniques such as State-Action-Reward-State-Action Learning (SARSA) and the Temporal Difference learning (TD). Through simulations, we show that QL-IDS performs with 100% detection rate while SARSA-IDS and TD-IDS perform at the order of 99.5%.