This file was created by the TYPO3 extension
bib
--- Timezone: UTC
Creation date: 2024-11-21
Creation time: 15-52-10
--- Number of references
28
inproceedings
2024-wagner-madtls
Madtls: Fine-grained Middlebox-aware End-to-end Security for Industrial Communication
2024
7
1
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2024/2024-wagner-madtls.pdf
ACM
19th ACM ASIA Conference on Computer and Communications Security (ACM AsiaCCS '24), Singapur
Singapur
ACM ASIA Conference on Computer and Communications Security (AsiaCCS)
July 1-5, 2024
10.1145/3634737.3637640
1
EricWagner
DavidHeye
MartinSerror
IkeKunze
KlausWehrle
MartinHenze
inproceedings
2024-kunze-spintrap
SpinTrap: Catching Speeding QUIC Flows
2024
5
7
legato
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2024/2024-kunze-spintrap.pdf
IEEE/IFIP
Proceedings of the 2024 IEEE/IFIP Network Operations and Management Symposium (NOMS '24)
2024 IEEE/IFIP Network Operations and Management Symposium
10.1109/NOMS59830.2024.10575719
1
IkeKunze
ConstantinSander
LarsTissen
BenediktBode
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2024-kunze-civic
In-Situ Model Validation for Continuous Processes Using In-Network Computing
2024
5
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2024/2024-kunze-civic.pdf
IEEE
Proceedings of the 7th IEEE International Conference on Industrial Cyber-Physical Systems (ICPS '24)
10.1109/ICPS59941.2024.10639999
1
IkeKunze
DominikScheurenberg
LiamTirpitz
SandraGeisler
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2023-kunze-spin-bit-in-the-wild
Does It Spin? On the Adoption and Use of QUIC’s Spin Bit
2023
10
legato
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-kunze-spin-bit-in-the-wild.pdf
ACM
Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference (IMC '23)
Internet Measurement Conference 2023
10.1145/3618257.3624844
1
IkeKunze
ConstantinSander
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2023-sander-quic-ecn
ECN with QUIC: Challenges in the Wild
2023
10
legato
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-sander-quic-ecn.pdf
https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.14273
ACM
Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference (IMC '23)
Internet Measurement Conference 2023
979-8-4007-0382-9/23/10
10.1145/3618257.3624821
1
ConstantinSander
IkeKunze
LeoBlöcher
MikeKosek
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2023-grote-mvca-fairness
Instant Messaging Meets Video Conferencing: Studying the Performance of IM Video Calls
2023
6
legato
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-grote-mvca-fairness.pdf
IFIP/IEEE
Proceedings of the Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference (TMA '23)
978-3-903176-58-4
10.23919/TMA58422.2023.10199019
1
LaurenzGrote
IkeKunze
ConstantinSander
KlausWehrle
incollection
2023_pennekamp_crd-a.i
Evolving the Digital Industrial Infrastructure for Production: Steps Taken and the Road Ahead
2023
2
8
35-60
The Internet of Production (IoP) leverages concepts such as digital shadows, data lakes, and a World Wide Lab (WWL) to advance today’s production. Consequently, it requires a technical infrastructure that can support the agile deployment of these concepts and corresponding high-level applications, which, e.g., demand the processing of massive data in motion and at rest. As such, key research aspects are the support for low-latency control loops, concepts on scalable data stream processing, deployable information security, and semantically rich and efficient long-term storage. In particular, such an infrastructure cannot continue to be limited to machines and sensors, but additionally needs to encompass networked environments: production cells, edge computing, and location-independent cloud infrastructures. Finally, in light of the envisioned WWL, i.e., the interconnection of production sites, the technical infrastructure must be advanced to support secure and privacy-preserving industrial collaboration. To evolve today’s production sites and lay the infrastructural foundation for the IoP, we identify five broad streams of research: (1) adapting data and stream processing to heterogeneous data from distributed sources, (2) ensuring data interoperability between systems and production sites, (3) exchanging and sharing data with different stakeholders, (4) network security approaches addressing the risks of increasing interconnectivity, and (5) security architectures to enable secure and privacy-preserving industrial collaboration. With our research, we evolve the underlying infrastructure from isolated, sparsely networked production sites toward an architecture that supports high-level applications and sophisticated digital shadows while facilitating the transition toward a WWL.
Cyber-physical production systems; Data streams; Industrial data processing; Industrial network security; Industrial data security; Secure industrial collaboration
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-pennekamp-iop-a.i.pdf
Springer
Interdisciplinary Excellence Accelerator Series
Internet of Production: Fundamentals, Applications and Proceedings
978-3-031-44496-8
10.1007/978-3-031-44497-5_2
1
JanPennekamp
AnastasiiaBelova
ThomasBergs
MatthiasBodenbenner
AndreasBührig-Polaczek
MarkusDahlmanns
IkeKunze
MoritzKröger
SandraGeisler
MartinHenze
DanielLütticke
BenjaminMontavon
PhilippNiemietz
LuciaOrtjohann
MaximilianRudack
Robert H.Schmitt
UweVroomen
KlausWehrle
MichaelZeng
incollection
2023_rueppel_crd-b2.ii
Model-Based Controlling Approaches for Manufacturing Processes
2023
2
8
221-246
The main objectives in production technology are quality assurance, cost reduction, and guaranteed process safety and stability. Digital shadows enable a more comprehensive understanding and monitoring of processes on shop floor level. Thus, process information becomes available between decision levels, and the aforementioned criteria regarding quality, cost, or safety can be included in control decisions for production processes. The contextual data for digital shadows typically arises from heterogeneous sources. At shop floor level, the proximity to the process requires usage of available data as well as domain knowledge. Data sources need to be selected, synchronized, and processed. Especially high-frequency data requires algorithms for intelligent distribution and efficient filtering of the main information using real-time devices and in-network computing. Real-time data is enriched by simulations, metadata from product planning, and information across the whole process chain. Well-established analytical and empirical models serve as the base for new hybrid, gray box approaches. These models are then applied to optimize production process control by maximizing the productivity under given quality and safety constraints. To store and reuse the developed models, ontologies are developed and a data lake infrastructure is utilized and constantly enlarged laying the basis for a World Wide Lab (WWL). Finally, closing the control loop requires efficient quality assessment, immediately after the process and directly on the machine. This chapter addresses works in a connected job shop to acquire data, identify and optimize models, and automate systems and their deployment in the Internet of Production (IoP).
Process control; Model-based control; Data aggregation; Model identification; Model optimization
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-rueppel-iop-b2.i.pdf
Springer
Interdisciplinary Excellence Accelerator Series
Internet of Production: Fundamentals, Applications and Proceedings
978-3-031-44496-8
10.1007/978-3-031-44497-5_7
1
Adrian KarlRüppel
MuzafferAy
BenediktBiernat
IkeKunze
MarkusLandwehr
SamuelMann
JanPennekamp
PascalRabe
Mark P.Sanders
DominikScheurenberg
SvenSchiller
TiandongXi
DirkAbel
ThomasBergs
ChristianBrecher
UweReisgen
Robert H.Schmitt
KlausWehrle
incollection
2023_klugewilkes_crd-b2.iv
Modular Control and Services to Operate Line-less Mobile Assembly Systems
2023
2
8
303-328
The increasing product variability and lack of skilled workers demand for autonomous, flexible production. Since assembly is considered a main cost driver and accounts for a major part of production time, research focuses on new technologies in assembly. The paradigm of Line-less Mobile Assembly Systems (LMAS) provides a solution for the future of assembly by mobilizing all resources. Thus, dynamic product routes through spatiotemporally configured assembly stations on a shop floor free of fixed obstacles are enabled. In this chapter, we present research focal points on different levels of LMAS, starting with the macroscopic level of formation planning, followed by the mesoscopic level of mobile robot control and multipurpose input devices and the microscopic level of services, such as interpreting autonomous decisions and in-network computing. We provide cross-level data and knowledge transfer through a novel ontology-based knowledge management. Overall, our work contributes to future safe and predictable human-robot collaboration in dynamic LMAS stations based on accurate online formation and motion planning of mobile robots, novel human-machine interfaces and networking technologies, as well as trustworthy AI-based decisions.
Lineless mobile assembly systems (LMAS); Formation planning; Online motion planning; In-network computing; Interpretable AI; Human-machine collaboration; Ontology-based knowledge management
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2023/2023-klugewilkes-iop-b2.iv.pdf
Springer
Interdisciplinary Excellence Accelerator Series
Internet of Production: Fundamentals, Applications and Proceedings
978-3-031-44496-8
10.1007/978-3-031-44497-5_13
1
AlineKluge-Wilkes
RalphBaier
DanielGossen
IkeKunze
AleksandraMüller
AmirShahidi
DominikWolfschläger
ChristianBrecher
BurkhardCorves
MathiasHüsing
VerenaNitsch
Robert H.Schmitt
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2022-kunze-coin-transport
Evolving the End-to-End Transport Layer in Times of Emerging Computing In The Network (COIN)
2022
11
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2022/2022-kunze-coin-transport.pdf
Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on New IP and Beyond, co-located with the 30th IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols
Lexington, Kentucky, USA
1st Workshop on New IP and Beyond, co-located with the 30th IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols
30 October, 2022
10.1109/ICNP55882.2022.9940379
1
IkeKunze
DirkTrossen
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2022-sander-h3-prio-hol
Analyzing the Influence of Resource Prioritization on HTTP/3 HOL Blocking and Performance
2022
6
27
legato
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2022/2022-sander-h3-prio-hol.pdf
https://tma.ifip.org/2022/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2022/06/tma2022-paper28.pdf
IFIP
Proceedings of the Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference (TMA '22)
Enschede
Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference
27.06.22-30.06.22
978-3-903176-47-8
1
ConstantinSander
IkeKunze
KlausWehrle
article
2022_brauner_iop
A Computer Science Perspective on Digital Transformation in Production
ACM Transactions on Internet of Things
2022
5
1
3
2
The Industrial Internet-of-Things (IIoT) promises significant improvements for the manufacturing industry by facilitating the integration of manufacturing systems by Digital Twins. However, ecological and economic demands also require a cross-domain linkage of multiple scientific perspectives from material sciences, engineering, operations, business, and ergonomics, as optimization opportunities can be derived from any of these perspectives. To extend the IIoT to a true Internet of Production, two concepts are required: first, a complex, interrelated network of Digital Shadows which combine domain-specific models with data-driven AI methods; and second, the integration of a large number of research labs, engineering, and production sites as a World Wide Lab which offers controlled exchange of selected, innovation-relevant data even across company boundaries. In this article, we define the underlying Computer Science challenges implied by these novel concepts in four layers: Smart human interfaces provide access to information that has been generated by model-integrated AI. Given the large variety of manufacturing data, new data modeling techniques should enable efficient management of Digital Shadows, which is supported by an interconnected infrastructure. Based on a detailed analysis of these challenges, we derive a systematized research roadmap to make the vision of the Internet of Production a reality.
Internet of Production; World Wide Lab; Digital Shadows; Industrial Internet of Things
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2022/2022-brauner-digital-transformation.pdf
ACM
2691-1914
10.1145/3502265
1
PhilippBrauner
ManuelaDalibor
MatthiasJarke
IkeKunze
IstvánKoren
GerhardLakemeyer
MartinLiebenberg
JudithMichael
JanPennekamp
ChristophQuix
BernhardRumpe
Wilvan der Aalst
KlausWehrle
AndreasWortmann
MartinaZiefle
inproceedings
2021_pennekamp_laser
Collaboration is not Evil: A Systematic Look at Security Research for Industrial Use
2021
12
21
Following the recent Internet of Things-induced trends on digitization in general, industrial applications will further evolve as well. With a focus on the domains of manufacturing and production, the Internet of Production pursues the vision of a digitized, globally interconnected, yet secure environment by establishing a distributed knowledge base.
Background. As part of our collaborative research of advancing the scope of industrial applications through cybersecurity and privacy, we identified a set of common challenges and pitfalls that surface in such applied interdisciplinary collaborations.
Aim. Our goal with this paper is to support researchers in the emerging field of cybersecurity in industrial settings by formalizing our experiences as reference for other research efforts, in industry and academia alike.
Method. Based on our experience, we derived a process cycle of performing such interdisciplinary research, from the initial idea to the eventual dissemination and paper writing. This presented methodology strives to successfully bootstrap further research and to encourage further work in this emerging area.
Results. Apart from our newly proposed process cycle, we report on our experiences and conduct a case study applying this methodology, raising awareness for challenges in cybersecurity research for industrial applications. We further detail the interplay between our process cycle and the data lifecycle in applied research data management. Finally, we augment our discussion with an industrial as well as an academic view on this research area and highlight that both areas still have to overcome significant challenges to sustainably and securely advance industrial applications.
Conclusions. With our proposed process cycle for interdisciplinary research in the intersection of cybersecurity and industrial application, we provide a foundation for further research. We look forward to promising research initiatives, projects, and directions that emerge based on our methodological work.
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-pennekamp-laser-collaboration.pdf
ACSA
Proceedings of the Workshop on Learning from Authoritative Security Experiment Results (LASER '20), co-located with the 36th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC '20), December 7-11, 2020, Austin, TX, USA
Austin, TX, USA
Learning from Authoritative Security Experiment Results (LASER '20)
December 8, 2020
978-1-891562-81-5
10.14722/laser-acsac.2020.23088
1
JanPennekamp
ErikBuchholz
MarkusDahlmanns
IkeKunze
StefanBraun
EricWagner
MatthiasBrockmann
KlausWehrle
MartinHenze
inproceedings
2021-kunze-spin-tracker
Tracking the QUIC Spin Bit on Tofino
2021
12
7
15–21
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-kunze-spin-tracker.pdf
ACM
Proceedings of the 2021 Workshop on Evolution, Performance and Interoperability of QUIC (EPIQ '21)
9781450391351
10.1145/3488660.3493804
1
IkeKunze
ConstantinSander
KlausWehrle
JanRüth
inproceedings
2021-kunze-efm-evaluation
L, Q, R, and T - Which Spin Bit Cousin Is Here to Stay?
2021
7
22 - 28
/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-kunze-efm-evaluation.pdf
ACM
ANRW '21: Proceedings of the Applied Networking Research Workshop
Virtual Event
Applied Networking Research Workshop (ANRW '21)
July 2021
10.1145/3472305.3472319
1
IkeKunze
KlausWehrle
JanRüth
inproceedings
2021-kunze-signal-detection
Detecting Out-Of-Control Sensor Signals in Sheet Metal Forming using In-Network Computing
2021
6
10
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-kunze-signal-detection.pdf
IEEE
Proceedings of the 2021 IEEE 30th International Symposium
on Industrial Electronics (ISIE)
978-1-7281-9023-5
2163-5145
10.1109/ISIE45552.2021.9576221
1
IkeKunze
PhilippNiemietz
LiamTirpitz
RenéGlebke
DanielTrauth
ThomasBergs
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2021-glebke-service-based-forwarding
Service-based Forwarding via Programmable Dataplanes
2021
6
10
reflexes
/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-glebke-service-based-forwarding.pdf
IEEE
Proceedings of the 2021 IEEE International Conference on High Performance Switching and Routing: Workshop on Semantic Addressing and Routing for Future Networks (SARNET-21)
978-1-6654-4005-9
2325-5609
10.1109/HPSR52026.2021.9481814
1
RenéGlebke
DirkTrossen
IkeKunze
DavidLou
JanRüth
MirkoStoffers
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2021-kunze-coordinate-transformation
Investigating the Applicability of In-Network Computing to Industrial Scenarios
2021
5
11
334-340
in-network computing; latency; approximation
internet-of-production,reflexes
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-kunze-coordinate-transformation.pdf
IEEE
Proceedings of the 4th IEEE International Conference on Industrial Cyber-Physical Systems (ICPS '21)
978-1-7281-6207-2
10.1109/ICPS49255.2021.9468247
1
IkeKunze
RenéGlebke
JanScheiper
MatthiasBodenbenner
Robert H.Schmitt
KlausWehrle
article
2021_buckhorst_lmas
Holarchy for Line-less Mobile Assembly Systems Operation in the Context of the Internet of Production
Procedia CIRP
2021
5
3
99
448-453
Assembly systems must provide maximum flexibility qualified by organization and technology to offer cost-compliant performance features to differentiate themselves from competitors in buyers' markets. By mobilization of multipurpose resources and dynamic planning, Line-less Mobile Assembly Systems (LMASs) offer organizational reconfigurability. By proposing a holarchy to combine LMASs with the concept of an Internet of Production (IoP), we enable LMASs to source valuable information from cross-level production networks, physical resources, software nodes, and data stores that are interconnected in an IoP. The presented holarchy provides a concept of how to address future challenges, meet the requirements of shorter lead times, and unique lifecycle support. The paper suggests an application of decision making, distributed sensor services, recommender-based data reduction, and in-network computing while considering safety and human usability alike.
Proceedings of the 14th CIRP Conference on Intelligent Computation in Manufacturing Engineering (ICME '20), July 14-17, 2020, Gulf of Naples, Italy
Internet of Production; Line-less Mobile Assembly System; Industrial Assembly; Smart Factory
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-buckhorst-holarchy.pdf
Elsevier
Gulf of Naples, Italy
July 14-17, 2020
2212-8271
10.1016/j.procir.2021.03.064
1
Armin F.Buckhorst
BenjaminMontavon
DominikWolfschläger
MelanieBuchsbaum
AmirShahidi
HenningPetruck
IkeKunze
JanPennekamp
ChristianBrecher
MathiasHüsing
BurkhardCorves
VerenaNitsch
KlausWehrle
Robert H.Schmitt
inproceedings
2021-kunze-aqm-tofino-p4
Tofino + P4: A Strong Compound for AQM on High-Speed Networks?
2021
5
72-80
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-kunze-aqm-tofino-p4.pdf
IFIP/IEEE
Proceedings of the International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM '21)
Virtual Event
International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM '21)
May 2021
978-1-7281-9041-9
1
IkeKunze
MoritzGunz
DavidSaam
KlausWehrle
JanRüth
inproceedings
2021-sander-zoom-cc
Video Conferencing and Flow-Rate Fairness: A First Look at Zoom and the Impact of Flow-Queuing AQM
2021
3
internet-of-production
/fileadmin/papers/2021/2021-sander-zoom-fairness-aqm.pdf
https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.00904
Springer
Proceedings of the Passive and Active Measurement Conference (PAM '21)
Passive and Active Measurement Conference (PAM 2021)
10.1007/978-3-030-72582-2_1
1
ConstantinSander
IkeKunze
KlausWehrle
JanRüth
article
2020_niemietz_stamping
Stamping Process Modelling in an Internet of Production
Procedia Manufacturing
2020
7
11
49
61-68
Sharing data between companies throughout the supply chain is expected to be beneficial for product quality as well as for the economical savings in the manufacturing industry. To utilize the available data in the vision of an Internet of Production (IoP) a precise condition monitoring of manufacturing and production processes that facilitates the quantification of influences throughout the supply chain is inevitable. In this paper, we consider stamping processes in the context of an Internet of Production and the preliminaries for analytical models that utilize the ever-increasing available data. Three research objectives to cope with the amount of data and for a methodology to monitor, analyze and evaluate the influence of available data onto stamping processes have been identified: (i) State detection based on cyclic sensor signals, (ii) mapping of in- and output parameter variations onto process states, and (iii) models for edge and in-network computing approaches. After discussing state-of-the-art approaches to monitor stamping processes and the introduction of the fineblanking process as an exemplary stamping process, a research roadmap for an IoP enabling modeling framework is presented.
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Through-Life Engineering Service (TESConf '19), October 27-29, 2019, Cleveland, OH, USA
Stamping Process; Industry 4.0; Fine-blanking; Internet of production; Condition monitoring; Data analytics
internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2020/2020-niemietz-stamping-modelling.pdf
Elsevier
Cleveland, OH, USA
October 27-29, 2019
2351-9789
10.1016/j.promfg.2020.06.012
1
PhilippNiemietz
JanPennekamp
IkeKunze
DanielTrauth
KlausWehrle
ThomasBergs
inproceedings
2020-mann-ur-weldseamstudy
Study on weld seam geometry control for connected gas metal arc welding systems
2020
6
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2020/2020-mann-weld-seam-geometry-control.pdf
Proceedings of the 2020 Internal Conference on Ubiquitous Robots
Internal Conference on Ubiquitous Robots
June 22-26, 2020
10.1109/UR49135.2020.9144839
1
SamuelMann
RenéGlebke
IkeKunze
DominikScheurenberg
RahulSharma
UweReisgen
KlausWehrle
DirkAbel
article
2019-kunze-ccwild-tnsm
Congestion Control in the Wild - Investigating Content Provider Fairness
IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management
2019
12
27
17
2
1224 - 1238
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2019/2019-kunze-ccwild-tnsm.pdf
1932-4537
10.1109/TNSM.2019.2962607
1
IkeKunze
JanRüth
OliverHohlfeld
inproceedings
2019-glebke-in-network-cv
Towards Executing Computer Vision Functionality on Programmable Network Devices
2019
12
9
reflexes,maki,internet-of-production
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2019/2019-glebke-in-network-cv.pdf
Online
ACM
1st ACM CoNEXT Workshop on Emerging in-Network Computing Paradigms (ENCP '19)
en
978-1-4503-7000-4/19/12
10.1145/3359993.3366646
1
RenéGlebke
JohannesKrude
IkeKunze
JanRüth
FelixSenger
KlausWehrle
inproceedings
2019-rueth-ccfness
An Empirical View on Content Provider Fairness
2019
6
19
maki
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2019/2019-rueth-ccfness.pdf
https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.07152
IFIP/IEEE
In Proceedings of the Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference (TMA '19)
Paris, France
Network Traffic Measurement and Analysis Conference
19.06.2019 - 21.06.2019
10.23919/TMA.2019.8784684
1
JanRüth
IkeKunze
OliverHohlfeld
article
rueth:iw:TNSM19
TCP’s Initial Window – Deployment in the Wild and its Impact on Performance
IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management
2019
1
30
16
2
389--402
maki
http://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2019/2019-rueth-iwtnsm.pdf
1932-4537
10.1109/TNSM.2019.2896335
1
JanRüth
IkeKunze
OliverHohlfeld
article
2017-ziegeldorf-bmcmedgenomics-bloom
BLOOM: BLoom filter based Oblivious Outsourced Matchings
BMC Medical Genomics
2017
7
26
10
Suppl 2
29-42
Whole genome sequencing has become fast, accurate, and cheap, paving the way towards the large-scale collection and processing of human genome data. Unfortunately, this dawning genome era does not only promise tremendous advances in biomedical research but also causes unprecedented privacy risks for the many. Handling storage and processing of large genome datasets through cloud services greatly aggravates these concerns. Current research efforts thus investigate the use of strong cryptographic methods and protocols to implement privacy-preserving genomic computations. We propose FHE-Bloom and PHE-Bloom, two efficient approaches for genetic disease testing using homomorphically encrypted Bloom filters. Both approaches allow the data owner to securely outsource storage and computation to an untrusted cloud. FHE-Bloom is fully secure in the semi-honest model while PHE-Bloom slightly relaxes security guarantees in a trade-off for highly improved performance. We implement and evaluate both approaches on a large dataset of up to 50 patient genomes each with up to 1000000 variations (single nucleotide polymorphisms). For both implementations, overheads scale linearly in the number of patients and variations, while PHE-Bloom is faster by at least three orders of magnitude. For example, testing disease susceptibility of 50 patients with 100000 variations requires only a total of 308.31 s (σ=8.73 s) with our first approach and a mere 0.07 s (σ=0.00 s) with the second. We additionally discuss security guarantees of both approaches and their limitations as well as possible extensions towards more complex query types, e.g., fuzzy or range queries. Both approaches handle practical problem sizes efficiently and are easily parallelized to scale with the elastic resources available in the cloud. The fully homomorphic scheme, FHE-Bloom, realizes a comprehensive outsourcing to the cloud, while the partially homomorphic scheme, PHE-Bloom, trades a slight relaxation of security guarantees against performance improvements by at least three orders of magnitude.
Proceedings of the 5th iDASH Privacy and Security Workshop 2016
Secure outsourcing; Homomorphic encryption; Bloom filters
sscilops;mynedata;rfc;health
https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2017/2017-ziegeldorf-bmcmedgenomics-bloom.pdf
Online
BioMed Central
Chicago, IL, USA
November 11, 2016
en
1755-8794
10.1186/s12920-017-0277-y
1
Jan HenrikZiegeldorf
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