4.7 Article

NOMA-Assisted Secure Offloading for Vehicular Edge Computing Networks With Asynchronous Deep Reinforcement Learning

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TITS.2023.3320861

Keywords

Vehicular edge computing; physical layer security; non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA); secure offloading; deep reinforcement learning

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This paper investigates the use of non-orthogonal multiple access for secure offloading in vehicular edge computing networks, considering the presence of multiple malicious eavesdropper vehicles. A joint optimization problem is formulated to minimize system energy consumption while satisfying computation delay constraints, and a learning algorithm-based scheme is proposed to solve the problem.
Mobile edge computing (MEC) offers promising solutions for various delay-sensitive vehicular applications by providing high-speed computing services for a large number of user vehicles simultaneously. In this paper, we investigate non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) assisted secure offloading for vehicular edge computing (VEC) networks in the presence of multiple malicious eavesdropper vehicles. To secure the wireless offloading from the user vehicles to the MEC server at the base station, the physical layer security (PLS) technology is leveraged, where a group of jammer vehicles is scheduled to form a NOMA cluster with each user vehicle for providing jamming signals to the eavesdropper vehicles while not interfering with the legitimate offloading of the user vehicle. We formulate a joint optimization of the transmit power, the computation resource allocation and the selection of jammer vehicles in each NOMA cluster, with the objective of minimizing the system energy consumption while subjecting to the computation delay constraint. Due to the dynamic characteristics of the wireless fading channel and the high mobility of the vehicles, the joint optimization is formulated as a Markov decision process (MDP). Therefore, we propose an asynchronous advantage actor-critic (A3C) learning algorithm-based energy-efficiency secure offloading (EESO) scheme to solve the MDP problem. Simulation results demonstrate that the agent adopting the A3C-based EESO scheme can rapidly adapt to the highly dynamic VEC networks and improve the system energy efficiency on the premise of ensuring offloading information security and low computation delay.

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