skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


This content will become publicly available on November 1, 2025

Title: Integrated Sensing and Communication Under DISCO Physical-Layer Jamming Attacks
Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems traditionally presuppose that sensing and communication (S&C) channels remain approximately constant during their coherence time. However, a “DISCO” reconfigurable intelligent surface (DRIS), i.e., an illegitimate RIS with random, time-varying reflection properties that acts like a “disco ball,” introduces a paradigm shift that enables active channel aging more rapidly during the channel coherence time. In this letter, we investigate the impact of DISCO jamming attacks launched by a DRIS-based fully-passive jammer (FPJ) on an ISAC system. Specifically, an ISAC problem formulation and a corresponding waveform optimization are presented in which the ISAC waveform design considers the trade-off between the S&C performance and is formulated as a Pareto optimization problem. Moreover, a theoretical analysis is conducted to quantify the impact of DISCO jamming attacks. Numerical results are presented to evaluate the S&C performance under DISCO jamming attacks and to validate the derived theoretical analysis.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2107182 2030029
PAR ID:
10598712
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
IEEE
Date Published:
Journal Name:
IEEE Wireless Communications Letters
Volume:
13
Issue:
11
ISSN:
2162-2337
Page Range / eLocation ID:
3044 to 3048
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) is considered an emerging technology for 6th-generation (6G) wireless and mobile networks. It is expected to enable a wide variety of vertical applications, ranging from unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) detection for critical infrastructure protection to physiological sensing for mobile healthcare. Despite its significant socioeconomic benefits, ISAC technology also raises unique challenges in system security and user privacy. Being aware of the security and privacy challenges, understanding the trade-off between security and communication performance, and exploring potential countermeasures in practical systems are critical to a wide adoption of this technology in various application scenarios. This talk will discuss various security and privacy threats in emerging ISAC systems with a focus on communication-centric ISAC systems, that is, using the cellular or WiFi infrastructure for sensing. We will then examine potential mechanisms to secure ISAC systems and protect user privacy at the physical and data layers under different sensing modes. At the wireless physical (PHY) layer, an ISAC system is subject to both passive and active attacks, such as unauthorized passive sensing, unauthorized active sensing, signal spoofing, and jamming. Potential countermeasures include wireless channel/radio frequency (RF) environment obfuscation, waveform randomization, anti-jamming communication, and spectrum/RF monitoring. At the data layer, user privacy could be compromised during data collection, sharing, storage, and usage. For sensing systems powered by artificial intelligence (AI), user privacy could also be compromised during the model training and inference stages. An attacker could falsify the sensing data to achieve a malicious goal. Potential countermeasures include the application of privacy enhancing technologies (PETs), such as data anonymization, differential privacy, homomorphic encryption, trusted execution, and data synthesis. 
    more » « less
  2. In this Letter, we propose and investigate a retroreflective optical integrated sensing and communication (RO-ISAC) system using orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) and corner cube reflector (CCR). To accurately model the reflected sensing channel of the RO-ISAC system, both a point source model and an area source model are proposed according to the two main types of light sources that are widely used. Detailed theoretical and experimental results are presented to verify the accuracy of the proposed channel models and evaluate the communication and sensing performance of the considered RO-ISAC system. 
    more » « less
  3. Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) is a key enabling technique for future wireless networks owing to its efficient hardware and spectrum utilization. In this paper, we focus on dual-functional waveform design for a multi-input multi-output (MIMO) orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) ISAC system, which is considered to be a promising solution for practical deployment. Since the dual-functional waveform carries communication information, its random nature leads to high range-Doppler sidelobes in the ambiguity function, which in turn degrades radar sensing performance. To suppress range- Doppler sidelobes, we propose a novel symbol-level precoding (SLP)-based waveform design for MIMO-OFDM ISAC systems by fully exploiting the available temporal degrees of freedom. Our goal is to minimize the range-Doppler integrated sidelobe level (ISL) while satisfying the constraints of target illumination power, multi-user communication quality of service (QoS), and constant-modulus transmission. To solve the resulting non-convex waveform design problem, we develop an efficient algorithm using the majorization-minimization (MM) and alternative direction method of multipliers (ADMM) methods. Simulation results show that the proposed waveform has significantly reduced range-Doppler sidelobes compared with signals designed only for communications and other baselines. In addition, the proposed waveform design achieves target detection and estimation performance close to that achievable by waveforms designed only for radar, which demonstrates the superiority of the proposed SLP-based ISAC approach. 
    more » « less
  4. Emerging intelligent reflecting surfaces (IRSs) significantly improve system performance, but also pose a huge risk for physical layer security. Existing works have illustrated that a disco IRS (DIRS), i.e., an illegitimate IRS with random time-varying reflection properties (like a “disco ball”), can be employed by an attacker to actively age the channels of legitimate users (LUs). Such active channel aging (ACA) generated by the DIRS can be employed to jam multi-user multiple-input single-output (MU-MISO) systems without relying on either jamming power or LU channel state information (CSI). To address the significant threats posed by DIRS-based fully-passive jammers (FPJs), an anti-jamming precoder is proposed that requires only the statistical characteristics of the DIRS-based ACA channels instead of their CSI. The statistical characteristics of DIRS-jammed channels are first derived, and then the anti-jamming precoder is derived based on the statistical characteristics. Furthermore, we prove that the anti-jamming precoder can achieve the maximum signal-to-jamming-plus-noise ratio (SJNR). To acquire the ACA statistics without changing the system architecture or cooperating with the illegitimate DIRS, we design a data frame structure that the legitimate access point (AP) can use to estimate the statistical characteristics. During the designed data frame, the LUs only need to feed back their received power to the legitimate AP when they detect jamming attacks. Numerical results are also presented to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed anti-jamming precoder against the DIRS-based FPJs and the feasibility of the designed data frame used by the legitimate AP to estimate the statistical characteristics. 
    more » « less
  5. We consider a secure integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) scenario, where a signal is transmitted through a state-dependent wiretap channel with one legitimate receiver with which the transmitter communicates and one honest-but-curious target that the transmitter wants to sense. The secure ISAC channel is modeled as two state-dependent fast-fading channels with correlated Rayleigh fading coefficients and independent additive Gaussian noise components. Delayed channel outputs are fed back to the transmitter to improve the communication performance and to estimate the channel state sequence. We establish and illustrate an achievable secrecy-distortion region for degraded secure ISAC channels under correlated Rayleigh fading, for which we show that the signal-to-interference-plus-noise is not a sufficient statistic. We also evaluate the inner bound for a large set of parameters to derive practical design insights. The presented results include parameter ranges for which the secrecy capacity of a classical wiretap channel setup is surpassed and for which the channel capacity is approached. Thus, we illustrate for correlated Rayleigh fading cases that our secure ISAC methods can (i) eliminate the need for the legitimate receiver to have a statistical advantage over the eavesdropper and (ii) provide communication security with minimal rate penalty. 
    more » « less