Abstract

In future aviation surveillance, the demand for higher real-time updates for global flights can be met by deploying automatic dependent surveillance–broadcast (ADS-B) receivers on low Earth orbit satellites, capitalizing on their global coverage and terrain-independent capabilities for seamless monitoring. Specific emitter identification (SEI) leverages the distinctive features of ADS-B data. High data collection and annotation costs, along with limited dataset size, can lead to overfitting during training and low model recognition accuracy. Transfer learning, which does not require source and target domain data to share the same distribution, significantly reduces the sensitivity of traditional models to data volume and distribution. It can also address issues related to the incompleteness and inadequacy of communication emitter datasets. This paper proposes a distributed sensor system based on transfer learning to address the specific emitter identification. Firstly, signal fingerprint features are extracted using a bispectrum transform (BST) to train a convolutional neural network (CNN) preliminarily. Decision fusion is employed to tackle the challenges of the distributed system. Subsequently, a transfer learning strategy is employed, incorporating frozen model parameters, maximum mean discrepancy (MMD), and classification error measures to reduce the disparity between the target and source domains. A hyperbolic space module is introduced before the output layer to enhance the expressive capacity and data information extraction. After iterative training, the transfer learning model is obtained. Simulation results confirm that this method enhances model generalization, addresses the issue of slow convergence, and leads to improved training accuracy.

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