SPLGApr 12, 2024

Mitigating Receiver Impact on Radio Frequency Fingerprint Identification via Domain Adaptation

arXiv:2404.08566v124 citationsh-index: 3IEEE Internet of Things Journal
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a cross-receiver RFFI problem for enhancing communication security, representing an incremental advance by adapting existing methods to a new scenario.

The paper tackles the problem of Radio Frequency Fingerprint Identification (RFFI) performance degradation when models are deployed on different receivers than trained on, by formulating it as a model adaptation problem and proposing a method with domain alignment and adaptive pseudo-labeling, achieving effective mitigation of receiver impact and improved performance.

Radio Frequency Fingerprint Identification (RFFI), which exploits non-ideal hardware-induced unique distortion resident in the transmit signals to identify an emitter, is emerging as a means to enhance the security of communication systems. Recently, machine learning has achieved great success in developing state-of-the-art RFFI models. However, few works consider cross-receiver RFFI problems, where the RFFI model is trained and deployed on different receivers. Due to altered receiver characteristics, direct deployment of RFFI model on a new receiver leads to significant performance degradation. To address this issue, we formulate the cross-receiver RFFI as a model adaptation problem, which adapts the trained model to unlabeled signals from a new receiver. We first develop a theoretical generalization error bound for the adaptation model. Motivated by the bound, we propose a novel method to solve the cross-receiver RFFI problem, which includes domain alignment and adaptive pseudo-labeling. The former aims at finding a feature space where both domains exhibit similar distributions, effectively reducing the domain discrepancy. Meanwhile, the latter employs a dynamic pseudo-labeling scheme to implicitly transfer the label information from the labeled receiver to the new receiver. Experimental results indicate that the proposed method can effectively mitigate the receiver impact and improve the cross-receiver RFFI performance.

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