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In-Network PCA and Anomaly Detection

Authors:
Huang, Ling
Nguyen, XuanLong
Garofalakis, Minos
Jordan, Michael
Joseph, Anthony D.
Taft, Nina
Technical Report Identifier: EECS-2007-10
January 11, 2007

Abstract: We consider the problem of network anomaly detection in large distributed systems. In this setting, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) has been proposed as a method for discovering anomalies by continuously tracking the projection of the data onto a residual subspace. This method was shown to work well empirically in highly aggregated networks, that is, those with a limited number of large nodes and at coarse time scales. This approach, however, has scalability limitations. To overcome these limitations, we develop a PCA-based anomaly detector in which adaptive local data filters send to a coordinator just enough data to enable accurate global detection. Our method is based on a stochastic matrix perturbation analysis that characterizes the tradeoff between the accuracy of anomaly detection and the amount of data communicated over the network.