4.7 Article

Smart and Secure CAV Networks Empowered by AI-Enabled Blockchain: The Next Frontier for Intelligent Safe Driving Assessment

Journal

IEEE NETWORK
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 197-204

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/MNET.101.2100387

Keywords

Blockchains; Safety; Artificial intelligence; Task analysis; Servers; Peer-to-peer computing; Logic gates

Funding

  1. PETRAS National Centre of Excellence for IoT Systems Cybersecurity - UK EPSRC [EP/S035362/1]
  2. AiDrivers Ltd.

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This article proposes a novel framework called BEST, which utilizes blockchain and intelligent assessment models to ensure the safety and data security of autonomous driving. The framework achieves better data credibility and prediction accuracy in vehicular safety assessment and discusses future challenges in CAV networks.
Securing safe driving for connected and autonomous vehicles (CAVs) continues to be a widespread concern, despite various sophisticated functions delivered by artificial intelligence for in-vehicle devices. Diverse malicious network attacks are ubiquitous, along with the worldwide implementation of the Internet of Vehicles, which exposes a range of reliability and privacy threats for managing data in CAV networks. Combined with the fact that the capability of existing CAVs in handling intensive computation tasks is limited, this implies a need for designing an efficient assessment system to guarantee autonomous driving safety without compromising data security. In this article we propose a novel framework, namely Blockchain-enabled intElligent Safe-driving assessmenT (BEST), which offers a smart and reliable approach for conducting safe driving supervision while protecting vehicular information. Specifically, a promising solution that exploits a long short-term memory model is introduced to assess the safety level of the moving CAVs. Then we investigate how a distributed blockchain obtains adequate trustworthiness and robustness for CAV data by adopting a byzantine fault tolerance-based delegated proof-of-stake consensus mechanism. Simulation results demonstrate that our presented BEST gains better data credibility with a higher prediction accuracy for vehicular safety assessment when compared with existing schemes. Finally, we discuss several open challenges that need to be addressed in future CAV networks.

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