84.2NIMay 18
A Geometric Algebra-Informed 3D Gaussian Splatting Framework for Wireless Scene RepresentationJingzhou Shen, Tianya Zhao, Xuyu Wang
In this paper, we introduce Geometric Algebra-Informed 3D Gaussian Splatting (GAI-GS), a framework for wireless modeling that couples 3D Gaussian splatting with a geometric algebra-based attention mechanism to explicitly model ray-object interactions in complex propagation environments. GAI-GS encodes joint spatial-electromagnetic (EM) relations into token representations, enabling scene-level aggregation within a unified, end-to-end neural architecture. This design grounds wireless ray propagation in electromagnetic principles, allowing token interactions to model key effects such as multipath, attenuation, and reflection/diffraction. Through extensive evaluations on multiple real-world indoor datasets, GAI-GS consistently surpasses current baselines across various wireless tasks.
CROct 8, 2025
EMPalm: Exfiltrating Palm Biometric Data via Electromagnetic Side-ChannelsHaowen Xu, Tianya Zhao, Xuyu Wang et al.
Palm recognition has emerged as a dominant biometric authentication technology in critical infrastructure. These systems operate in either single-modal form, using palmprint or palmvein individually, or dual-modal form, fusing the two modalities. Despite this diversity, they share similar hardware architectures that inadvertently emit electromagnetic (EM) signals during operation. Our research reveals that these EM emissions leak palm biometric information, motivating us to develop EMPalm--an attack framework that covertly recovers both palmprint and palmvein images from eavesdropped EM signals. Specifically, we first separate the interleaved transmissions of the two modalities, identify and combine their informative frequency bands, and reconstruct the images. To further enhance fidelity, we employ a diffusion model to restore fine-grained biometric features unique to each domain. Evaluations on seven prototype and two commercial palm acquisition devices show that EMPalm can recover palm biometric information with high visual fidelity, achieving SSIM scores up to 0.79, PSNR up to 29.88 dB, and FID scores as low as 6.82 across all tested devices, metrics that collectively demonstrate strong structural similarity, high signal quality, and low perceptual discrepancy. To assess the practical implications of the attack, we further evaluate it against four state-of-the-art palm recognition models, achieving a model-wise average spoofing success rate of 65.30% over 6,000 samples from 100 distinct users.
CRFeb 3
Generalizable and Interpretable RF Fingerprinting with Shapelet-Enhanced Large Language ModelsTianya Zhao, Junqing Zhang, Haowen Xu et al.
Deep neural networks (DNNs) have achieved remarkable success in radio frequency (RF) fingerprinting for wireless device authentication. However, their practical deployment faces two major limitations: domain shift, where models trained in one environment struggle to generalize to others, and the black-box nature of DNNs, which limits interpretability. To address these issues, we propose a novel framework that integrates a group of variable-length two-dimensional (2D) shapelets with a pre-trained large language model (LLM) to achieve efficient, interpretable, and generalizable RF fingerprinting. The 2D shapelets explicitly capture diverse local temporal patterns across the in-phase and quadrature (I/Q) components, providing compact and interpretable representations. Complementarily, the pre-trained LLM captures more long-range dependencies and global contextual information, enabling strong generalization with minimal training overhead. Moreover, our framework also supports prototype generation for few-shot inference, enhancing cross-domain performance without additional retraining. To evaluate the effectiveness of our proposed method, we conduct extensive experiments on six datasets across various protocols and domains. The results show that our method achieves superior standard and few-shot performance across both source and unseen domains.
CRMay 1, 2025
Protocol-agnostic and Data-free Backdoor Attacks on Pre-trained Models in RF FingerprintingTianya Zhao, Ningning Wang, Junqing Zhang et al.
While supervised deep neural networks (DNNs) have proven effective for device authentication via radio frequency (RF) fingerprinting, they are hindered by domain shift issues and the scarcity of labeled data. The success of large language models has led to increased interest in unsupervised pre-trained models (PTMs), which offer better generalization and do not require labeled datasets, potentially addressing the issues mentioned above. However, the inherent vulnerabilities of PTMs in RF fingerprinting remain insufficiently explored. In this paper, we thoroughly investigate data-free backdoor attacks on such PTMs in RF fingerprinting, focusing on a practical scenario where attackers lack access to downstream data, label information, and training processes. To realize the backdoor attack, we carefully design a set of triggers and predefined output representations (PORs) for the PTMs. By mapping triggers and PORs through backdoor training, we can implant backdoor behaviors into the PTMs, thereby introducing vulnerabilities across different downstream RF fingerprinting tasks without requiring prior knowledge. Extensive experiments demonstrate the wide applicability of our proposed attack to various input domains, protocols, and PTMs. Furthermore, we explore potential detection and defense methods, demonstrating the difficulty of fully safeguarding against our proposed backdoor attack.