Paper detail

An Adaptive Black-box Backdoor Detection Method for Deep Neural Networks

With the surge of Machine Learning (ML), An emerging amount of intelligent applications have been developed. Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) have demonstrated unprecedented performance across various fields such as medical diagnosis and autonomous driving. While DNNs are widely employed in security-sensitive fields, they are identified to be vulnerable to Neural Trojan (NT) attacks that are controlled and activated by stealthy triggers. In this paper, we target to design a robust and adaptive Trojan detection scheme that inspects whether a pre-trained model has been Trojaned before its deployment. Prior works are oblivious of the intrinsic property of trigger distribution and try to reconstruct the trigger pattern using simple heuristics, i.e., stimulating the given model to incorrect outputs. As a result, their detection time and effectiveness are limited. We leverage the observation that the pixel trigger typically features spatial dependency and propose the first trigger approximation based black-box Trojan detection framework that enables a fast and scalable search of the trigger in the input space. Furthermore, our approach can also detect Trojans embedded in the feature space where certain filter transformations are used to activate the Trojan. We perform extensive experiments to investigate the performance of our approach across various datasets and ML models. Empirical results show that our approach achieves a ROC-AUC score of 0.93 on the public TrojAI dataset. Our code can be found at https://github.com/xinqiaozhang/adatrojan

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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