Researcher profile

Chuyi Wang

Chuyi Wang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Bias in the Shadows: Explore Shortcuts in Encrypted Network Traffic Classification

Pre-trained models operating directly on raw bytes have achieved promising performance in encrypted network traffic classification (NTC), but often suffer from shortcut learning-relying on spurious correlations that fail to generalize to real-world data. Existing solutions heavily rely on model-specific interpretation techniques, which lack adaptability and generality across different model architectures and deployment scenarios. In this paper, we propose BiasSeeker, the first semi-automated framework that is both model-agnostic and data-driven for detecting dataset-specific shortcut features in encrypted traffic. By performing statistical correlation analysis directly on raw binary traffic, BiasSeeker identifies spurious or environment-entangled features that may compromise generalization, independent of any classifier. To address the diverse nature of shortcut features, we introduce a systematic categorization and apply category-specific validation strategies that reduce bias while preserving meaningful information. We evaluate BiasSeeker on 19 public datasets across three NTC tasks. By emphasizing context-aware feature selection and dataset-specific diagnosis, BiasSeeker offers a novel perspective for understanding and addressing shortcut learning in encrypted network traffic classification, raising awareness that feature selection should be an intentional and scenario-sensitive step prior to model training.

preprint2026arXiv

UniAlign: A Model-Agnostic Framework for Robust Network Traffic Classification under Distribution Shifts

Network traffic classification (NTC) models often suffer severe performance degradation when deployed in real-world environments due to distribution shifts caused by changing network conditions. Existing robustness-enhancing approaches are commonly coupled to specific model architectures or data settings, fail to generalize to state-of-the-art raw-byte-based NTC models, or incur significant training overhead. In this paper, we propose UniAlign, a novel model-agnostic framework that improves the robustness of deep learning-based NTC models under distribution shifts. UniAlign combines \emph{domain alignment fine-tuning}, which encourages the learning of domain-invariant traffic representations across heterogeneous network conditions, with \emph{stable model ensembling}, which enhances inference robustness by aggregating checkpoints within a flat loss region. The framework can be seamlessly integrated into existing supervised NTC models without requiring specific feature modalities or introducing non-constant additional training costs. We evaluate UniAlign on three public datasets covering diverse distribution shifts, including encryption schemes, data collection devices, and attack behaviors. Experimental results on two representative NTC models demonstrate that, compared with standard training, UniAlign improves average classification accuracy by 2.51\% and average F1 score by 2.71\%, outperforming the strongest baseline by 1.45\% in accuracy and 1.69\% in F1 score, while requiring only 12.4\%--53.9\% of the training time of all NTC-specific baselines.