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With the advent of new advanced analysis tools and access to related published data, it is getting more difficult for data owners to suppress private information from published data while still providing useful information. This dual problem of providing useful, accurate information and protecting it at the same time has

With the advent of new advanced analysis tools and access to related published data, it is getting more difficult for data owners to suppress private information from published data while still providing useful information. This dual problem of providing useful, accurate information and protecting it at the same time has been challenging, especially in healthcare. The data owners lack an automated resource that provides layers of protection on a published dataset with validated statistical values for usability. Differential privacy (DP) has gained a lot of attention in the past few years as a solution to the above-mentioned dual problem. DP is defined as a statistical anonymity model that can protect the data from adversarial observation while still providing intended usage. This dissertation introduces a novel DP protection mechanism called Inexact Data Cloning (IDC), which simultaneously protects and preserves information in published data while conveying source data intent. IDC preserves the privacy of the records by converting the raw data records into clonesets. The clonesets then pass through a classifier that removes potential compromising clonesets, filtering only good inexact cloneset. The mechanism of IDC is dependent on a set of privacy protection metrics called differential privacy protection metrics (DPPM), which represents the overall protection level. IDC uses two novel performance values, differential privacy protection score (DPPS) and clone classifier selection percentage (CCSP), to estimate the privacy level of protected data. In support of using IDC as a viable data security product, a software tool chain prototype, differential privacy protection architecture (DPPA), was developed to utilize the IDC. DPPA used the engineering security mechanism of IDC. DPPA is a hub which facilitates a market for data DP security mechanisms. DPPA works by incorporating standalone IDC mechanisms and provides automation, IDC protected published datasets and statistically verified IDC dataset diagnostic report. DPPA is currently doing functional, and operational benchmark processes that quantifies the DP protection of a given published dataset. The DPPA tool was recently used to test a couple of health datasets. The test results further validate the IDC mechanism as being feasible.
Contributorsthomas, zelpha (Author) / Bliss, Daniel W (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Banerjee, Ayan (Committee member) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The mobile crowdsensing (MCS) applications leverage the user data to derive useful information by data-driven evaluation of innovative user contexts and gathering of information at a high data rate. Such access to context-rich data can potentially enable computationally intensive crowd-sourcing applications such as tracking a missing person or capturing a

The mobile crowdsensing (MCS) applications leverage the user data to derive useful information by data-driven evaluation of innovative user contexts and gathering of information at a high data rate. Such access to context-rich data can potentially enable computationally intensive crowd-sourcing applications such as tracking a missing person or capturing a highlight video of an event. Using snippets and pictures captured from multiple mobile phone cameras with specific contexts can improve the data acquired in such applications. These MCS applications require efficient processing and analysis to generate results in real time. A human user, mobile device and their interactions cause a change in context on the mobile device affecting the quality contextual data that is gathered. Usage of MCS data in real-time mobile applications is challenging due to the complex inter-relationship between: a) availability of context, context is available with the mobile phones and not with the cloud, b) cost of data transfer to remote cloud servers, both in terms of communication time and energy, and c) availability of local computational resources on the mobile phone, computation may lead to rapid battery drain or increased response time. The resource-constrained mobile devices need to offload some of their computation.



This thesis proposes ContextAiDe an end-end architecture for data-driven distributed applications aware of human mobile interactions using Edge computing. Edge processing supports real-time applications by reducing communication costs. The goal is to optimize the quality and the cost of acquiring the data using a) modeling and prediction of mobile user contexts, b) efficient strategies of scheduling application tasks on heterogeneous devices including multi-core devices such as GPU c) power-aware scheduling of virtual machine (VM) applications in cloud infrastructure e.g. elastic VMs. ContextAiDe middleware is integrated into the mobile application via Android API. The evaluation consists of overheads and costs analysis in the scenario of ``perpetrator tracking" application on the cloud, fog servers, and mobile devices. LifeMap data sets containing actual sensor data traces from mobile devices are used to simulate the application run for large scale evaluation.
ContributorsPore, Madhurima (Author) / Gupta, Sandeep K. S. (Thesis advisor, Committee member) / Banerjee, Ayan (Committee member) / Reisslein, Martin (Committee member) / CERIN, CHRISTOPHE (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Increase in the usage of Internet of Things(IoT) devices across physical systems has provided a platform for continuous data collection, real-time monitoring, and extracting useful insights. Limited computing power and constrained resources on the IoT devices has driven the physical systems to rely on external resources such as cloud computing

Increase in the usage of Internet of Things(IoT) devices across physical systems has provided a platform for continuous data collection, real-time monitoring, and extracting useful insights. Limited computing power and constrained resources on the IoT devices has driven the physical systems to rely on external resources such as cloud computing for handling compute-intensive and data-intensive processing. Recently, physical environments have began to explore the usage of edge devices for handling complex processing. However, these environments may face many challenges suchas uncertainty of device availability, uncertainty of data relevance, and large set of geographically dispersed devices. This research proposes the design of a reliable distributed management system that focuses on the following objectives: 1. improving the success rate of task completion in uncertain environments. 2. enhancing the reliability of the applications and 3. support latency sensitive applications. Main modules of the proposed system include: 1. A novel proactive user recruitment approach to improve the success rate of the task completion. 2.Contextual data acquisition and integration of false data detection for enhancing the reliability of the applications. 3. Novel distributed management of compute resources for achieving real-time monitoring and to support highly responsive applications. User recruitment approaches select the devices for offloading computation. Proposed proactive user recruitment module selects an optimized set of devices that match the resource requirements of the application. Contextual data acquisition module banks on the contextual requirements for identifying the data sources that are more useful to the application. Proposed reliable distributed management system can be used as a framework for offloading the latency sensitive applications across the volunteer computing edge devices.
ContributorsCHAKATI, VINAYA (Author) / Gupta, Sandeep K.S (Thesis advisor) / Dasgupta, Partha (Committee member) / Banerjee, Ayan (Committee member) / Pal, Anamitra (Committee member) / Kumar, Karthik (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021