Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2448

Resilient Privacy Preservation Through a Presumed Secrecy Mechanism for Mobility and Localization in Intelligent Transportation Systems

Chronological data

Date of first publication2024-12-27
Date of publication in PubData 2025-10-23

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Variant form of DOI: 10.3390/s25010115
Alanazi, M. D., Albekairi, M., Abbas, G., Alanazi, T. M., Kaaniche, K., Elsayed, G., & Mercorelli, P. (2025). Resilient Privacy Preservation Through a Presumed Secrecy Mechanism for Mobility and Localization in Intelligent Transportation Systems. Sensors, 25(1), Article 115
Published in ISSN: 1424-8220
Sensors

Abstract

An intelligent transportation system (ITS) offers commercial and personal movement through the smart city (SC) communication paradigms with hassle-free information sharing. ITS designs and architectures have improved via information and communication technologies in recent years. The information shared through the communication medium in SCs is exposed to adversary risk, resulting in privacy issues. Privacy issues impact the contingent mobility and localization of the ITS path. This paper introduces a novel resilient privacy preserving (RPP) method through presumed secrecy (PS) to provide a robust privacy measure. The privacy of the progressive communication sessions is preserved based on the previous security depletion levels. The interruptions in traffic data-related communication sessions are recurrently identified, and re-handoffs are recommended with dodged transfer learning. The empirical results indicate a 25% reduction in computational overhead and a 30% enhancement in privacy protection over conventional methods, demonstrating the model’s efficacy in secure ITS communication. Compared with existing methods, the proposed approach decreases security depletion rates by 15% across varying traffic densities, underscoring ITS resilience in high-interaction scenarios.

Keywords

Forward Secrecy; Intelligent Transportation; Smart City; Transfer Learning; Machine Learning

More information

DDC

388 :: Verkehr; Landverkehr
006 :: Spezielle Computerverfahren

Creation Context

Research