Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Spell, Samuel, Shyu, Chi-Ren
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27153
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1866910177917140992
author Spell, Samuel
Shyu, Chi-Ren
author_facet Spell, Samuel
Shyu, Chi-Ren
contents While current network intrusion detection systems achieve satisfactory accuracy, they often lack explainability. Subgroup Discovery (SD) addresses this by building interpretable rules that characterize feature interactions associated with attack traffic. With large datasets, classical heuristic beam search methods struggle with exponentially scaling search spaces and can prune critical multi-feature interactions. This paper introduces a quantum-enhanced pipeline for SD applied to network intrusion detection using NSL-KDD, formulating SD as quantum optimization for the first time. By encoding feature selection as a Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization (QUBO) and solving it via the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) on IBM Quantum hardware (ibm_pittsburgh), the pipeline identifies subgroups of network features that discriminate normal from attack traffic. A least-squares regression QUBO formulation fits the Weighted Relative Accuracy (WRAcc) landscape over feature subsets, with surrogate sampling for larger QUBOs. Results are benchmarked against exhaustive enumeration and Beam Search using ratios for Hamiltonian quality and WRAcc. Hardware scaling experiments on ibm_pittsburgh (10-30 qubits) reveal that QAOA at depth p = 1 shows WRAcc ratios of 0.983 at 10 qubits, 0.971 at 15 qubits, 0.855 at 20 qubits, and 0.624 at 25 qubits, degrading to 0.039 at 30 qubits as circuit noise dominates, establishing an empirical NISQ scaling boundary. Results demonstrate that QAOA discovers subgroups competitive with classical heuristics and finds multi-feature interaction patterns that greedy Beam Search prunes, with QAOA-unique subgroups achieving up to 99.6% test precision. This work establishes a framework for quantum combinatorial optimization in cybersecurity and characterizes hardware scaling for NISQ devices.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_27153
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Formulating Subgroup Discovery as a Quantum Optimization Problem for Network Security
Spell, Samuel
Shyu, Chi-Ren
Quantum Physics
Cryptography and Security
While current network intrusion detection systems achieve satisfactory accuracy, they often lack explainability. Subgroup Discovery (SD) addresses this by building interpretable rules that characterize feature interactions associated with attack traffic. With large datasets, classical heuristic beam search methods struggle with exponentially scaling search spaces and can prune critical multi-feature interactions. This paper introduces a quantum-enhanced pipeline for SD applied to network intrusion detection using NSL-KDD, formulating SD as quantum optimization for the first time. By encoding feature selection as a Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization (QUBO) and solving it via the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) on IBM Quantum hardware (ibm_pittsburgh), the pipeline identifies subgroups of network features that discriminate normal from attack traffic. A least-squares regression QUBO formulation fits the Weighted Relative Accuracy (WRAcc) landscape over feature subsets, with surrogate sampling for larger QUBOs. Results are benchmarked against exhaustive enumeration and Beam Search using ratios for Hamiltonian quality and WRAcc. Hardware scaling experiments on ibm_pittsburgh (10-30 qubits) reveal that QAOA at depth p = 1 shows WRAcc ratios of 0.983 at 10 qubits, 0.971 at 15 qubits, 0.855 at 20 qubits, and 0.624 at 25 qubits, degrading to 0.039 at 30 qubits as circuit noise dominates, establishing an empirical NISQ scaling boundary. Results demonstrate that QAOA discovers subgroups competitive with classical heuristics and finds multi-feature interaction patterns that greedy Beam Search prunes, with QAOA-unique subgroups achieving up to 99.6% test precision. This work establishes a framework for quantum combinatorial optimization in cybersecurity and characterizes hardware scaling for NISQ devices.
title Formulating Subgroup Discovery as a Quantum Optimization Problem for Network Security
topic Quantum Physics
Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27153