Topology-aware adaptive inspection for fraud in I4.0 supply chains
Supply chain fraud involving counterfeit or adulterated products presents threats to human health and safety. Quality Inspection is a key fraud mitigation tool where inspection planning involves allocating inspection resources across geographically dispersed assets considering both the cost and value of the inspection. I4.0 environments pose further challenges as their heterogeneous and dynamic cyber-physical environment creates a large inspection resource allocation solution space, causing the corresponding analysis to be computationally complex. In this paper, we contribute to supporting optimal inspection decisions of dynamic cyber-physical supply chains through the use of structural representations - topologies of the supply chain, physical premises, and their production context. We present an approach for topology modelling of supply chains, and illustrate its use within an adaptive inspection approach, showing that structural information can reduce malicious process discovery times by up to 90%.
Funding
ENABLE: Connecting communities to smart urban environments through the Internet of Things
Science Foundation Ireland
Find out more...SAUSE: Secure, Adaptive, Usable Software Engineering
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...UK Manufacturing Symbiosis NetworkPlus (UKMSN+)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...History
Publication
IEEE Transactions on Industrial InformaticsPublisher
IEEE Computer SocietyAlso affiliated with
- LERO - The Irish Software Research Centre
External identifier
Department or School
- Computer Science & Information Systems