Randomizing Security Activities with Attacker Circumvention Strategies

Citation:

James Pita, Christopher Kiekintveld, Michael Scott, and Milind Tambe. 2010. “Randomizing Security Activities with Attacker Circumvention Strategies .” In AAMAS 2010 Workshop on Optimisation in Multi-Agent Systems (OptMas).

Abstract:

Game theoretic methods for making resource allocation decision in security domains have attracted growing attention from both researchers and security practitioners, including deployed applications at both the LAX airport and the Federal Air Marshals Service. We develop a new class of security games designed to model decisions faced by the Transportation Security Administration and other agencies in protecting airports, ports, and other critical infrastructure. Our model allows for a more diverse set of security activities for the defensive resources than previous work, which has generally focused on interchangeable resources that can only defend against possible attacks in one way. Here, we are concerned in particular with the possibility that adversaries can circumvent specific security activities if they are aware of common security measures. The model we propose takes this capability into account and generates more unpredictable, diverse security policies as a result—without resorting to an external value for entropy or randomness. Solving these games is a significant computational challenge, and existing algorithms are not capable of solving realistic games. We introduce a new method that exploits common structure in these problems to reduce the size of the game representation and enable faster solution algorithm. These algorithms are able to scale to make larger games than existing solvers, as we show in our experimental results.
See also: 2010