Abstract

AbstractDeep learning (DL) is a special field of artificial intelligence that has increased its use in various fields and has proved its effectiveness in classification. The feasibility of using many hidden layers and many neurons for each layer in the DL architectures enables a detailed analyzing capability for classification and segmentation issues. Advancing the learning performance and generalization capability of the models for big data is one of the major advantages of DL that makes it a mandatory requirement for especially the Internet of Things (IoT) technology. Whereas tethering the sensing systems to the Internet enables remote control capabilities, communication, and coordination among the systems raises security vulnerability for many IoT devices. This study utilized DL algorithms, including deep belief networks and deep autoencoders, to perform an invasion detection application in IoT devices. The UNSW‐NB15 database, collected from a realistic network to evaluate cybersecurity applications, was utilized for training the DL models. The study aims to design a DL architecture for the implementation of secured IoT and to assess the performance and robustness of DL algorithms for detecting IoT‐based intrusions. The main contribution is SecureDeepNet‐IoT, which is an adaptive multikernel cybersecurity platform for sensing inputs. The SecureDeepNet‐IoT has achieved classification accuracy up to 95.05% and 94.39% for deep belief networks and deep neural networks, respectively. Deep autoencoder with extreme learning machine kernel has detected the IoT‐based invasion with accuracy rates of 97.86% and 98.15% for binary and multiinvasion classification, respectively. In addition to high generalization capability, the deep autoencoder kernel reached rapid enough speed in detecting abnormal sensing values in IoT.

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