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Fast Evasion Detection & Alert Management in Tree-Ensemble-Based Intrusion Detection Systems
Linköping University, Department of Computer and Information Science, Software and Systems. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-6405-4794
Linköping University, Department of Computer and Information Science, Software and Systems. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-1485-0802
2024 (English)In: 2024 IEEE 36TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TOOLS WITH ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, ICTAI, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) , 2024, p. 404-412Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Intrusion Detection Systems (IDSs) can help bolster cyber resilience in high-risk systems by promptly detecting anomalies and thwarting security threats which could have catastrophic consequences. While Machine Learning (ML) techniques like Tree Ensembles are well suited for tasks like detecting anomalies, the widespread adoption of these techniques in IDSs faces barriers due to the threat of evasion attacks. Moreover, ML-based IDSs are susceptible to producing a high rate of false positive alerts during detection, causing alert fatigue. To alleviate these problems, we present a method that uses counterexample regions to detect evasion attacks in tree-ensemble-based IDSs. We generate these counterexample regions by defining a modified mapping checker in VoTE, a fast & scalable formal verification tool specialized for tree ensembles. Our method also provides quaternary annotations, empowering security managers with nuanced insights to better handle alerts in the triage queue. Our approach does not require training a separate model and displays good detection performance (≥98 %) in both adversarial & non-adversarial scenarios in four real-world case studies when compared to several approaches in the literature. The prototype system we implement based on our method called Iceman has a very low prediction latency, making it 5-115x faster than the current state-of-the-art in evasion detection for tree ensembles. Finally, empirical evaluations show that Iceman can correctly re-annotate the samples in the presence of evasion attacks for alert management purposes with an accuracy of more than 98 % .

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) , 2024. p. 404-412
Series
Proceedings-International Conference on Tools With Artificial Intelligence, ISSN 1082-3409, E-ISSN 2375-0197
Keywords [en]
Evasion Attacks; Adversarial Defences; Intrusion Detection Systems; Tree Ensembles; Formal Methods
National Category
Computer Sciences Computer Systems
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-211768DOI: 10.1109/ICTAI62512.2024.00065ISI: 001447778900056Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85217421895ISBN: 9798331527242 (print)ISBN: 9798331527235 (electronic)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-211768DiVA, id: diva2:1939195
Conference
2024 IEEE 36th International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI), Herndon, VA, OCT 28-30, 2024
Funder
Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program (WASP)
Note

Funding Agencies|Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program (WASP) - Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

Available from: 2025-02-20 Created: 2025-02-20 Last updated: 2025-11-13
In thesis
1. Hardening Tree Ensembles: Real-Time and Effective Evasion Defences Beyond Adversarial Re-Training
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Hardening Tree Ensembles: Real-Time and Effective Evasion Defences Beyond Adversarial Re-Training
2025 (English)Licentiate thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Tree ensembles like random forests and gradient boosting machines are widely used machine learning (ML) models, often outperforming advanced techniques like deep neural networks on structured tabular data tasks. These models also have interpretable (human-understandable) structures that enable stakeholders to trace the decision-making process, making them particularly suitable for use in safety- and security-critical applications where trust in the model’s behaviour is paramount. Despite these advantages, recent work has shown that they are highly vulnerable to adversarial examples: carefully perturbed inputs that elicit misclassifications.

These vulnerabilities are especially concerning as ML continues to permeate domains that are critical to societal functioning. Their seriousness is underscored by legislation such as the recently passed European Union Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act. This act mandates resilience against AI-specific vulnerabilities like evasion attacks caused by adversarial examples targeting ML models at inference time. Measures intended to improve resilience against such evasions, often referred to as hardening, generally involve two strategies: proactive defences, which aim to make models robust (e.g., adversarial re-training), and reactive defences, which focus on detecting and mitigating evasions at inference time. This thesis examines both strategies; it shows that proactive methods like model re-training are ineffective for tree ensembles and consequently advances the state-of-the-art in reactive defences.

In the context of re-training, doubling the training set through targeted data augmentation steps left accuracy largely unchanged. However, robustness, when quantified using formal verification techniques, dropped by 28–82% across two case studies. This indicates that model re-training alone is ineffective for tree ensembles. To address this, we leveraged formal methods to develop Iceman, a prototype system that uses counterexample regions which violate the robustness property to detect evasion attempts. Iceman can detect evasion attacks regardless of the attack generation process without modifying the underlying tree ensemble. It outperforms the current state-of-the-art methods in evasion detection, OC-Score and GROOT. Across four case studies, it improves Matthews Correlation Coefficient scores by 0.20–0.91 and achieves detection speeds 5–115x faster than OC-Score. In addition, it provides alert filtering and prioritisation capabilities with over 98% accuracy to address alert fatigue in intrusion detection systems. However, Iceman’s applicability is limited to scenarios with fixed attacker perturbation budgets, characterised by pre-defined constraints on the input manipulations that an attacker can apply.

To expand this applicability to unconstrained attacker perturbation budgets, we developed an additional system, called Maverick, designed to complement Iceman for a better defensive strategy. Just like Iceman, Maverick does not modify the underlying tree ensemble and can detect evasion attacks regardless of the attack generation process. We prove that Maverick’s core detection mechanism is mathematically equivalent to OC-Score, and present enhancements that achieve 85–563x speedups over OC-Score while maintaining identical detection performance and supporting evasion attack diagnostics with over 93% accuracy.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Linköping: Linköping University Electronic Press, 2025. p. 31
Series
Linköping Studies in Science and Technology. Licentiate Thesis, ISSN 0280-7971 ; 2023
National Category
Computer Sciences Artificial Intelligence
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-219415 (URN)10.3384/9789181183269 (DOI)9789181183252 (ISBN)9789181183269 (ISBN)
Presentation
2025-12-16, Ada Lovelace, B-building, Campus Valla, Linköping, 13:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Note

Funding Agencies: This work was partially supported by the Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program (WASP) funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation.

Available from: 2025-11-13 Created: 2025-11-13 Last updated: 2025-11-13Bibliographically approved

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