Psychometrics for Hypnopaedia-Aware Machinery via Chaotic Projection of Artificial Mental Imagery
This addresses cybersecurity vulnerabilities in AI for machine learning practitioners, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing backdoor detection and unlearning methods.
The study tackled the problem of neural backdoors in AI systems, which pose cybersecurity risks by allowing unauthorized manipulations, and developed a self-aware unlearning mechanism to autonomously detach machines from backdoor triggers, achieving detection of deceptive patterns and estimation of infection likelihood.
Neural backdoors represent insidious cybersecurity loopholes that render learning machinery vulnerable to unauthorised manipulations, potentially enabling the weaponisation of artificial intelligence with catastrophic consequences. A backdoor attack involves the clandestine infiltration of a trigger during the learning process, metaphorically analogous to hypnopaedia, where ideas are implanted into a subject's subconscious mind under the state of hypnosis or unconsciousness. When activated by a sensory stimulus, the trigger evokes conditioned reflex that directs a machine to mount a predetermined response. In this study, we propose a cybernetic framework for constant surveillance of backdoors threats, driven by the dynamic nature of untrustworthy data sources. We develop a self-aware unlearning mechanism to autonomously detach a machine's behaviour from the backdoor trigger. Through reverse engineering and statistical inference, we detect deceptive patterns and estimate the likelihood of backdoor infection. We employ model inversion to elicit artificial mental imagery, using stochastic processes to disrupt optimisation pathways and avoid convergent but potentially flawed patterns. This is followed by hypothesis analysis, which estimates the likelihood of each potentially malicious pattern being the true trigger and infers the probability of infection. The primary objective of this study is to maintain a stable state of equilibrium between knowledge fidelity and backdoor vulnerability.