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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Olukola, Oluseyi, Rahimi, Nick
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.00859
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Table of Contents:
  • Machine learning based network intrusion detection systems are vulnerable to adversarial attacks that degrade classification performance under both gradient-based and distribution shift threat models. Existing defenses typically apply uniform detection strategies, which may not account for heterogeneous attack characteristics. This paper proposes an attack-aware multi-stage defense framework that learns attack-specific detection strategies through a weighted combination of ensemble disagreement, predictive uncertainty, and distributional anomaly signals. Empirical analysis across seven adversarial attack types reveals distinct detection signatures, enabling a two-stage adaptive detection mechanism. Experimental evaluation on a benchmark intrusion detection dataset indicates that the proposed system attains 94.2% area under the receiver operating characteristic curve and improves classification accuracy by 4.5 percentage points and F1-score by 9.0 points over adversarially trained ensembles. Under adaptive white-box attacks with full architectural knowledge, the system appears to maintain 94.4% accuracy with a 4.2% attack success rate, though this evaluation is limited to two adaptive variants and does not constitute a formal robustness guarantee. Cross-dataset validation further suggests that defense effectiveness depends on baseline classifier competence and may vary with feature dimensionality. These results suggest that attack-specific optimization combined with multi-signal integration can provide a practical approach to improving adversarial robustness in machine learning-based intrusion detection systems.