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TRAFFIC ANOMALY DETECTION
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A new 'Typical Day Analysis' technique for Traffic Anomaly Detection

Table of Contents

1. Theoretical anomaly detection methods. Set of algorithms proposed for this analysis: the most used SCC (CUSUM), the two main tests of goodness-of-fit and Mutual Information.2. Finding the optimal aggregation period for a time series of Internet traffic3. Comparative analysis of traffic anomaly detection methods4. Proposal of a new information-theory based technique (typical day analysis)5. Conclusions

About the Author

Antonio Cuadra-Sanchez is a Telecommunications Engineer (MSc) from the University of Cantabria (Spain). He also holds a Masters degree in Computing and communications from the University Autonoma of Madrid (Spain). He works as a research project manager and technology advisor for QoS and QoE in Indra. He has taught different courses of signalling protocols and networks (SS7, GSM, GPRS, UMTS, IMS and IPTV) in Telefonica R&D, Telefonica Spain and the Americas. He has published over 70 articles as much for the European organisms of regulation as for Telefonica Group, produced workshops and scientific and regulation book chapters, and has participated in lectures for different national and international conferences, including TeleManagement Forum, ETSI and IEEE.He currently leads the Celtic NOTTS projectand co-leads the Customer Experience Management (CEM) Implementation Guide at the TeleManagement Forum. Javier Aracil received the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees (Honors) from Technical University of Madrid in 1993 and 1995, both in Telecommunications Engineering. In 1995 he was awarded with a Fulbright scholarship and was appointed as a Postdoctoral Researcher of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California, Berkeley. In 1998 he was a research scholar at the Center for Advanced Telecommunications, Systems and Services of The University of Texas at Dallas. He has been an associate professor for University of Cantabria and Public University of Navarra and he is currently a full professor at Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain. His research interest are in optical networks and performance evaluation of communication networks. He has authored more than 100 papers in international conferences and journals.

Reviews

"...their focus is on the theoretical aspects of determining anomalous traffic...it’s bound to be of interest to those developing security solutions." --Network Security

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