Thursday, September 5, 2019
Detecting Complex Image Data Using Data Mining Techniques
Detecting Complex Image Data Using Data Mining Techniques Detecting complex image data using data mining techniques IMRAN KHAN ABSTRACT The Internet, computer networks and information are vital resources of current information trend and their protection has increased in importance in current existence. The intrusion detection system (IDS) plays a vital role to monitors vulnerabilities in network and generates alerts when found attacks. Today the educational network services increasing day today so that IDS becomes essential for security on internet. The Intrusion data classification and detection process is very complex process in network security. In current network security scenario various types of Intrusion attack are available some are known attack and some are unknown attack. The attack of know Intrusion detection used some well know technique such as signature based technique and rule based technique. In case of unknown Intrusion attack of attack detection is various challenging task. In current trend of Intrusion detection used some data mining technique such as classification and clustering. The process of c lassification improves the process of detection of Intrusion. In this dissertation used graph based technique for Intrusion classification and detection. This dissertation proposes efficient intrusion detection architecture which named IDS using improved ensemble techniques (IDSIET). The IDSIET contains a new improved algorithm of attribute reduction which combines rough set theory and a method of establishing multiple rough classifications and a process of identifying intrusion data. The experimental results illustrate the effectiveness of proposed architecture. Our proposed work is implemented in MATLAB .for implementation purpose write various function and script file for implementation of our proposed architecture. For the test of our hybrid method, we used DARPA KDDCUP99 dataset. This data set is basically set of network intrusion and host intrusion data. This data provided by UCI machine learning website. Proposed method compare with exiting ensemble techniques and generate the improved ensemble technique to getting better result such as detection rate, precision and recall value. Keywords- Intrusion Detection System (IDS), IDSIET, Neural Network, rough set theory, Network Security, MATALAB, KDDCUP99 Dataset. PROPOSED METHODOLOGY AND ARCHITECTURE Comparison with linear scale-space representation While not being used explicitly in SURF, we take interest here in the approximation of Gaussian kernels by box filters to understand the advantages and the limitations of the SURF approach. 3.1 Scale-space representation linear scale space The linear scale-space representation of a real valued image u : R2 7ââ â R defined on a continuous domain is obtained by a convolution with the Gaussian kernel uÃÆ' := GÃÆ' âËâ"u (1) where GÃÆ' is the centered, isotropic and separable 2-D Gaussian kernel with variance ÃÆ'2 âËâ¬(x,y) âËËR2, GÃÆ'(x,y) := 1 2Ãâ¬ÃÆ'2 eâËâx2+y2 2ÃÆ'2 = gÃÆ'(x)gÃÆ'(y) and gÃÆ'(x) = 1 âËÅ¡2Ãâ¬Ã ·ÃÆ'eâËâ x2 2ÃÆ'2 . (2) The variable ÃÆ' is usually referred to as the scale parameter. Discrete scale space In practice, for the processing of a numerical image u, this continuous filter is approximated using regular sampling, truncation and normalization: âËâ¬i,j âËËJâËâK,KK GÃÆ'(i,j) = 1 CK GÃÆ'(i,j) , where CK = K Xi,j =âËâK GÃÆ'(i,j). (3) The scale variable ÃÆ' is also sampled, generally using a power law, as discussed later in à § 3.2. Discrete box space Making use of the aforementioned box filter technique, such a multi-scale representation can be (very roughly) approximated using a box filter with square domain Ãâ = JâËâà ³,à ³KÃâ"JâËâà ³,à ³K uà ³ := 1 (2à ³ + 1)2 BÃâ âËâ"u. (4) The question now is how to set the parameter à ³ âËË N to get the best approximation of Gaussian zoom-out. Second moment comparison One may for instance choose to match the second order moment ÃÆ'2 of the 1D Gaussian gÃÆ' and the variance of the corresponding box filter, as suggested by [7]. This leads to the relation ÃÆ'2 à ³ = à ³ Xi =âËâà ³ i2 2à ³ + 1 = (2à ³ + 1)2 âËâ1 12 = à ³(à ³ + 1) 3 , (5) where ÃÆ'2 à ³ is the variance of the centered 1D box filter with width 2à ³ + 1. Thus, for large values of filter size (à ³ 1), we get approximately ÃÆ'à ³ ââ°Ë à ³ âËÅ¡3 ââ°Ë 0.58à ³. Since à ³ âËË N takes integer values, ÃÆ'à ³and ÃÆ' cannot match exactly in general. Moreover, due to the anisotropy of the box filter in 2D, it is impossible to match the covariance matrices. SURF scale parameter analogy Note that box filters are only used to approximate first and second order of Gaussian derivatives in SURF algorithm, and not to approximate Gaussian filtering like in [7]. However, when considering the approximation of second order Gaussian derivative Dxx GÃÆ'(x,y) = Dxx gÃÆ'(x)Ãâ"gÃÆ'(y) = 1 ÃÆ'22 ÃÆ'2 âËâ1gÃÆ'(x)Ãâ"gÃÆ'(y) By these condition order box filter operator DLxx, we can see that the1D Gaussian filter gÃÆ'(y) is approximated by 1D box filter with parameter à ³ = LâËâ1 2. The authors of SURF claim that the corresponding Gaussian scale is ÃÆ' = 1.2 3 L ââ°Ë 0.8à ³for à ³ 1, which is close but dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erent to the value given by Formula (5): ÃÆ'à ³ ââ°Ë 0.58à ³. Other analogies could have been made for scale variables, for instance by considering zero crossing of second order derivative of Gaussians, second moment of Gaussian derivatives, mean-square error minimization, but each one provides dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erent relations. In conclusion, defining a relation between the box parameters (L and `(L)) and the Gaussian scale variable ÃÆ' seems quite arbitrary. Visual comparison Figure 8 illustrates the dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erence between the linear scale-space representation obtained by Gaussian filtering and the box-space, that is its approximation by box-filters when using relation (5). While being roughly similar, the approximated scale-space exhibits some strong vertical and horizontal artifacts due to the anisotropy and the high frequencies of the box kernels. Again, while it is not being used explicitly in SURF, these artifacts may explain some of the spurious detections of the SURF approach that will be exhibited later on. 3.2 Box-space sampling Because of the dentition of first and second order box filters, the size parameter L cannot be chosen arbitrarily. The sampling values and the corresponding variables used to mimic the linear scale space analysis. The following paragraphs give more detailed explanations. Octave decomposition Alike most multi-scale decomposition approaches (see e.g. [13, 15]), the box-space discretization in SURF relies on dyadic sampling of the scale parameter L. The box length representation is therefore divided into octaves (similarly to SIFT [14, 13]), which are indexed by parameter o âËË{1,2,3,4}, where a new octave is created for every doubling of the kernel size. Note that, in order to save computation time, the filtered image is generally sub-sampled of factor two at every octave, as done for instance by SIFT [14]. As pointed out by the author of SURF [2], sub-sampling is not necessary with the use of box filters, since the computation time complexity does not depends on scale. However, while not being explicitly stated in the original paper [2], but as done in most implementations we have reviewed (for instance, this approximation is used in [3] but not in [5]), we choose to use sub-sampling to speed up the algorithm. More precisely, instead of evaluating the multi-scale operators at each pixel, we use a samplingâ⬠stepâ⬠which depends on the octave level (this sampling is detailed in the next sections). Note that this strategy is consistent with the fact that the number of features is decreasing with respect to scale. Level sampling Each octave is also divided in several levels (indexed here by the parameter i âËË {1,2,3,4}). In the usual discrete scale space analysis, these levels correspond directly to the desired sampling of the scale variable ÃÆ', which parametrizes the discretized Gaussian kernels GÃÆ' (see definition in Eq. (16)). In SURF, the relation between scale L, octave o and level i variables is L := 2o i + 1 . (6) These values are summarized in Table 2. Note that because of the non-maxima suppression involved in the feature selection, only intermediate levels are actually used to define interest points and local descriptors (i âËË{2,3}). On comparison of the box space and the linear scale space. (Top) Convolution with squared and centered box filters with radii à ³ = 5 and à ³ = 20 (respectively from left to right). (Middle) Corresponding Gaussian filters with respective scales ÃÆ'5 ââ°Ë 3.16 and ÃÆ'20 ââ°Ë 11.83, according to formula (5). Dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erence between Gaussian and Box filters (using a linear transform for visualization). We can see here that the box space is a rough approximation of the Gaussian scale space, that exhibits some artifacts due to the anisotropy and the high frequencies of the box kernels. Scale analogy with linear scale space As discussed before in Section 3.1, we can define a scale analysis variable by analogy with the linear scale space decomposition. In [2], the scale parameter ÃÆ'(L) associated with octave o and level i is obtained by the following relation ÃÆ'(L) := 1.2 3(2o Ãâ"i + 1) = 0.4L. (7) Since the relation between the scale ÃÆ'(L) of an interest point is linear in the size parameter L of box filters operators, we shall speak indià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erently of the former or the latter to indicate the scale. Remark A finer scale-space representation could be obtained (i.e. with sub-pixel values of L) using a bilinear interpolation of the image, as suggested in [2]. This is not performed in the proposed implementation. 3.3 Comparison with Gaussian derivative operators 3.3.1 First order operators The first order box filters DL x and DL y defined at scale L are approximations of the first derivatives of Gaussian kernel at the corresponding scale ÃÆ'(L) (see Eq. (7)), respectively corresponding to Dx GÃÆ'(x,y) = âËâ x ÃÆ'2(L) GÃÆ'(x,y) and Dy GÃÆ'(x,y). These operators are used for local feature description, in detailed we compares the first order box filter impulse response with the discretized Gaussian derivative kernel. DL x à ´ (Eq. (6)) Dx GÃÆ'(L) Illustration of the discrete derivative operator DL x (defined in Section 2.3.1) and discretization of the Gaussian derivative kernel Dx GÃÆ'(L) when using scale relation ÃÆ'(L) from Eq. (7). 3.3.2 The second order operators Second order dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erential operators are computed in the scale-space for the detection of interest points [9, 10]. In the linear scale-space representation, this boils down to the convolution with second derivatives of Gaussian kernels Dxx GÃÆ'(x,y) = 1 ÃÆ'22 ÃÆ'2 âËâ1GÃÆ'(x,y), Dyy GÃÆ', and Dxy GÃÆ'(x,y) = xy ÃÆ'4 GÃÆ'(x,y). (8) In the SURF approach, the convolution with theses kernels are approximated by second order box filters, previously introduced respectively as DL xx, DL yy , and DL xy . A visual comparison between second order derivatives of Gaussian and their analogous with box filters. These operators are required for local feature selection step in section 4. 3.3.3 Scale Normalization According to [12], dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erential operators have to be normalized when applied in linear scale space in order to achieve scale invariance detection of local features. More precisely, as it can be seen from Equation (21), the amplitude of the continuous second order Gaussian derivative filters decreases with scale variable ÃÆ' by a factor 1 ÃÆ'2. To balance this eà ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬ect, second order operators are usually normalized by ÃÆ'2, so that we get for instance (a) (b) (c) (d) On comparison of second order box filters and second order derivative of Gaussian kernels. (a) operator DL yy; (b) discretizedsecondorderGaussianderivative D2 y GÃÆ'; (c) operator DL xy; (d) discretized second order Gaussian derivative Dxy GÃÆ'; For comparison purpose, we used again the scale relation ÃÆ'(L) from Eq. (7). â⬠¢ the scale-normalized determinant of Hessian operator: DoHÃÆ' (u) :=uÃÆ' âËâ(Dxy uÃÆ')2; (9) â⬠¢ the scale-normalized Laplacian operator: à ¢Ãâ â⬠ÃÆ' u := ÃÆ'2à ¢Ãâ â⬠uÃÆ' = ÃÆ'2à ¢Ãâ â⬠GÃÆ' âËâ"u = ÃÆ'2(Dxx + Dyy)GÃÆ' âËâ"u = ÃÆ'2(Dxx uÃÆ' + Dyy uÃÆ'), (10) where à ¢Ãâ â⬠ÃÆ' GÃÆ'(x,y) = ÃÆ'2(Dxx +Dyy)à ¢-à ¦GÃÆ'(x,y) =x2+y2 ÃÆ'2 âËâ1GÃÆ'(x,y) is the multi-scale Laplacian of Gaussian. Observe that this operator can be obtained from the Trace of the scalenormalized Hessian matrix. These two operators are widely used in computer vision for feature detection. They are also approximatedinSURF,asdetailedinthenextsections. Asaconsequence, suchascale-normalization is also required with box filters to achieve similar invariance in SURF. To do so, the authors proposed that amplitude of operators DL xx , DL yy , and DL xy should be reweighted so that the l2 norms of normalized operators become constant over scales. The quadratic l2 norm of operators are estimated from the squared Frobenius norm of impulse responses kDL xxk2 2 := kDL xx à ´k2 F = kDL yy à ´k2 F =1 + 1 + (âËâ1)2L(2LâËâ1) = 6L(2LâËâ1), so that kDL xxk2 2 ââ°Ë 12L2 when L=1, and kDL xyk2 2 := kDL xy à ´k2 F =1 + 1 + (âËâ1)2 + (âËâ1)2LÃâ"L = 4L2. This means that box filters responses should be simply divided by the scale parameter L to achieve scale invariance detection. Interest point detection: In the previous sections, second order operators based on box filters have been introduced. These operators are multi-scale and may be normalized to yield scale invariant response. We will now take interest in their use for multi-scale local feature detection. Once the integral image has been computed, three consecutive steps are performed which are detailed in the following sections: 1. Feature filtering based on a combination of second order box filters; 2. Feature selection is combining non-maxima suppression and thresholding; 3. Scale-space location refinement (à § 4.3) using second order interpolation. This interest point detection task is summarized in Algorithm 1. Step-1 Filtering Image by Integration: Integral image and box filters Let u be the processed digital image defined over the pixel grid à ¢Ã¢â¬Å¾Ã ¦ = [0,N-1]Ãâ"[0.M-1], where M and N are positive integers. In the following, we only consider quantized gray valued images (taking values in the range [0; 255]), which is the simplest way to achieve robustness to color modifications, such as a white balance correction. The integral image of I for(x,y) à ââ¬Å¾ à ¢Ã¢â¬Å¾Ã ¦ is Flow Diagram: Figure3.1: showing the flow chart of the process for object detection Step 2: Point Detection: During the detection step, the local maxima in the box-space of the determinant of Hessianâ⬠operator are used to select interest point candidates. These candidates are then validated if the response is above a given threshold. Both the scale and location of these candidates are then refined using quadratic fitting. Typically, a few hundred interest points are detected in a megapixel image. input: image u, integral image U, octave o, level i output: DoHL(u) function Determinant_of_Hessian (U; o; i) L 2oi + 1 (Scale variable, Eq. (19)) for x := 0 to M à ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬ 1, step 2oà ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬1 do (Loop on columns) for y := 0 to N à ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬ 1, step 2oà ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬1 do (Loop on rows) DoHL(u)(x; y) Formula (24) (with (4), (10) and (11)) end for end for return DoHL(u) end function Algo input: image u output: listKeyPoints (Initialization) U IntegralImage(u) (Eq. (1)) (Step 1: filtering of features) for L 2 f3; 5; 7; 9; 13; 17; 25; 33; 49; 65g do (scale sampling) DoHL(u) Determinant_of_Hessian (U; L) end for (Step 2: selection and refinement of keypoints) for o := 1 to 4 do (octave sampling) for i := 2 to 3 do (levels sampling for maxima location) L -> 2o i + 1 listKeyPoints -> listKeyPoints + KeyPoints(o; i;DoHL(u)) end for end for return listKeyPoints So that the scale normalization factor C(L) for second order box filters should be proportional to 1 L2 However, the previous normalization is only true when L1. Indeed, while we have kDxxGÃÆ'k2 2 kDxyGÃÆ'k2 2 = 3 at any scale ÃÆ', this is not exactly true with box filters, where: kDL xxk2 2 kDL xyk2 2 = 3(2LâËâ1) 2L ââ°Ë 3 when L1. To account for this dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erence in normalization for small scales, while keeping the same (fast) un-normalized box filters, the author of SURF introduced in Formula (24) a weight factor: w(L) = kDL xxk2 kDL xyk2 à ·kDxyGÃÆ'k2 kDxxGÃÆ'k2 =r2LâËâ1 2L . (26) The numerical values of this parameter are listed in the last column of Table 2. As noticed by the authors of SURF, the variable w(L) does not vary so much across scales. This is the resaon why the weighting parameter w in Eq. (10) is fixed to w(3) = 0.9129. Feature selection: In our methodology, interest points are defined as local maxima of the aforementioned DoHL operator applied to the image u. These maxima are detected by considering a 3 Ãâ" 3 Ãâ" 3 neighborhood, andperforminganexhaustivecomparisonofeveryvoxelofthediscretebox-spacewith its 26 nearest-neighbors. The corresponding feature selection procedure is described in Algorithm 3. Algorithm 3 Selection of features input: o,i,DoHL(u) (Determinant of Hessian response at octave o and level i) output: listKeyPoints (List of keypoints in box space with sub-pixel coordinates (x,y,L)) function KeyPoints (o,i,DoHL(u)) L ââ 2oi + 1 for x := 0 to M âËâ1, step 2oâËâ1 do (Loop on columns) for y = 0 to N âËâ1, step 2oâËâ1 do (Loop on rows) if DoHL(u)(x,y) > tH then (Thresholding) if isMaximum (DoHL(u),x,y) then (Non-maximum suppression) if isRefined (DoHL(u),x,y,L) then addListKeyPoints (x,y,L) end if end if end if end for end for return listKeyPoints end function Remark A faster method has been proposed in [21] to find the local maxima without exhaustive search, which has been not implemented for the demo. Thresholding: Using four octaves and two levels for analysis, eight dià ¯Ã ¬Ã¢â ¬erent scales are therefore analyzed (see Table 2 in Section 3.2). In order to obtain a compact representation of the image -and also to cope with noise perturbation- the algorithm selects the most salient features from this set of local maxima. This is achieved by using a threshold tH on the response of the DoHL operator DoHL(u)(x,y) > tH . (27) Note that, since the operator is scale-normalized, the threshold is constant. In the demo, this threshold has been set to 10 assuming that the input image u takes values in the intervalJ0,255K. This setting enables us to have a performance similar to the original SURF algorithm [2, 1] (see Section 6 for more details). Figure 13 shows the set of interest points detected as local box-space maxima of the DoHL operator, and selected after thresholding. For visualization purpose, the radii of the circles is set as 2.5 times the box scale L of the corresponding interest points.
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