Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV)-assisted hierarchical federated learning (HFL) has emerged as a promising architecture for Internet of Things (IoT)-based smart agriculture, which enables scalable model training over large and sparse farmlands. In this setting, UAVs act as mobile edge servers, aggregating local updates from distributed agricultural IoT devices and relaying them to the cloud server. While HFL improves scalability and reduces communication overhead, it still faces critical security threats due to its reliance on public wireless channels and the vulnerability of model aggregation to malicious updates. In this paper, we propose a secure authentication scheme that integrates anomaly detection with elliptic curve cryptography (ECC)-based mutual authentication to protect both the communication and training phases. In the proposed scheme, UAVs authenticate participating clients before receiving their local models, then perform anomaly detection to identify and exclude malicious participants. If a client is found to be malicious, its identity credentials are revoked and broadcast by the cloud server to prevent future participation. The security of the proposed scheme is formally verified using Burrows–Abadi–Needham (BAN) logic, the Real-or-Random (RoR) model, and the Automated Validation of Internet Security Protocols and Applications (AVISPA) tool, along with informal security analysis. The performance evaluation includes comparisons of security features, computation cost, and communication cost with other related schemes, and an experimental assessment of anomaly detection performance. The results demonstrate that our scheme provides strong security guarantees, low overhead, and effective malicious client detection, making it well suited for UAV-assisted HFL in smart agriculture.
Choi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.