Mobile Cognitive Radio Networks (MCRNs) have emerged as a promising solution to address spectrum scarcity by enabling dynamic access to underutilized frequency bands assigned to Primary or Licensed Users (PUs). These networks rely on Cooperative Spectrum Sensing (CSS) to identify available spectrum, but this collaborative approach also introduces vulnerabilities to security threats—most notably, Spectrum Sensing Data Falsification (SSDF) attacks. In such attacks, malicious nodes deliberately report false sensing information, undermining the reliability and performance of the network. This paper investigates the application of machine learning techniques to detect and mitigate SSDF attacks in MCRNs, particularly considering the additional challenges introduced by node mobility. We propose a hybrid detection framework that integrates a reputation-based weighting mechanism with Support Vector Machine (SVM) and K-Nearest Neighbors (KNN) classifiers to improve detection accuracy and reduce the influence of falsified data. Experimental results on software defined radio (SDR) demonstrate that the proposed method significantly enhances the system’s ability to identify malicious behavior, achieving high detection accuracy, reduces the rate of data falsification by approximately 5–20%, increases the probability of attack detection, and supports the dynamic creation of a blacklist to isolate malicious nodes. These results underscore the potential of combining machine learning with trust-based mechanisms to strengthen the security and reliability of mobile cognitive radio networks.
Cifuentes et al. (Wed,) studied this question.