Saif Alzubi

2papers

2 Papers

60.5CVMar 25
Causal Transfer in Medical Image Analysis

Mohammed M. Abdelsamea, Daniel Tweneboah Anyimadu, Tasneem Selim et al.

Medical imaging models frequently fail when deployed across hospitals, scanners, populations, or imaging protocols due to domain shift, limiting their clinical reliability. While transfer learning and domain adaptation address such shifts statistically, they often rely on spurious correlations that break under changing conditions. On the other hand, causal inference provides a principled way to identify invariant mechanisms that remain stable across environments. This survey introduces and systematises Causal Transfer Learning (CTL) for medical image analysis. This paradigm integrates causal reasoning with cross-domain representation learning to enable robust and generalisable clinical AI. We frame domain shift as a causal problem and analyse how structural causal models, invariant risk minimisation, and counterfactual reasoning can be embedded within transfer learning pipelines. We studied spanning classification, segmentation, reconstruction, anomaly detection, and multimodal imaging, and organised them by task, shift type, and causal assumption. A unified taxonomy is proposed that connects causal frameworks and transfer mechanisms. We further summarise datasets, benchmarks, and empirical gains, highlighting when and why causal transfer outperforms correlation-based domain adaptation. Finally, we discuss how CTL supports fairness, robustness, and trustworthy deployment in multi-institutional and federated settings, and outline open challenges and research directions for clinically reliable medical imaging AI.

5.2CRMay 21
UNAD+: An Explainable Hybrid Framework for Unknown Network Attack Detection

Saif Alzubi, Frederic Stahl

The detection of previously unseen network attacks remains a major challenge for intrusion detection systems. Although supervised learning methods often perform well on known attack classes, they are limited when new attack types are not represented in the training data. Unsupervised methods are more suitable for detecting zero-day attacks, as they do not require labelled attack samples, but they often suffer from high false positive rates, which limits their real-world usefulness. This paper presents UNAD+, an enhanced framework for unknown network attack detection derived from the previously proposed Unknown Network Attack Detector (UNAD). UNAD+ combines a benign-only unsupervised ensemble with Weighted Majority Voting (WMV), a supervised refinement stage trained on pseudo-labelled detections, and a post hoc explainability layer that provides both local and global explanations. The framework was evaluated on the CICIDS2017 and NSL-KDD benchmark datasets. The results show that UNAD+ improves on the original UNAD framework, achieving F1-scores above 98% across the benchmark datasets while significantly reducing false positives and enhancing transparency and deployment suitability through integrated explainability.