Abstract

As the digital landscape expands rapidly due to technological advancements, cybersecurity concerns have become more prevalent. Intrusion Detection Systems (IDSs), which are crucial for identifying unusual network traffic indicative of malicious activity, have become a necessity. These systems can be either hardware or software-based. However, traditional IDS models often fail to adequately protect data privacy and detect complex, unique breaches, particularly within Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). To address these limitations, this paper proposes a novel Stacked Convolutional Neural Network and Bidirectional Long Short Term Memory (SCNN-Bi-LSTM) model for intrusion detection in WSNs. This model leverages Federated Learning (FL) to enhance intrusion detection performance and safeguard privacy. The FL-based SCNN-Bi-LSTM model is unique in its approach, allowing multiple sensor nodes to collaboratively train a central global model without revealing private data, thereby alleviating privacy concerns. The deep learning methodology of the SCNN-Bi-LSTM model effectively identifies sophisticated and previously unknown cyber threats by meticulously examining both local and temporal linkages in network patterns. The model has been specifically designed to detect and categorize different types of Denial of Service (DoS) attacks using specialized WSN-DS and CIC-IDS-2017 datasets. Compared to traditional Artificial Deep Neural Network (ADNN) models, our proposed FL-SCNN-Bi-LSTM model demonstrated superior detection rates for complex and unknown attacks, significantly improving IDS performance. The model achieved a notable classification accuracy of approximately 99.9% precision and recall on both datasets, substantially reducing false positives and negatives. Our research underscores the potential of federated learning and deep learning in enhancing the security and privacy of WSNs. The proposed FL-SCNN-Bi-LSTM architecture not only facilitates the identification of complex cyber threats but also exemplifies how deep learning techniques can be employed to bolster intrusion detection systems while preserving user data privacy.

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