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Mobility as a service: MAnaging Cybersecurity Risks across Consumers, Organisations and Sectors (MACRO)

Reference Number
EP/V039164/1
Title
Mobility as a service: MAnaging Cybersecurity Risks across Consumers, Organisations and Sectors (MACRO)
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Transport)
Not Energy Related
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Computer Science and Informatics)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Consumer attitudes and behaviour)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Other sociological economical and environmental impact of energy)
Other (Energy technology information dissemination)
Principal Investigator
Dr N Ozkan
Environment Group
Policy Studies Institute
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
17 August 2021
End Date
16 February 2024
Duration
30 months
Total Grant Value
£550,218
Industrial Sectors
Info. & commun. Technol.
Region
London
Programme
GU : Global Uncertainty
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Dr N Ozkan, Environment Group, Policy Studies Institute
Other Investigator
Dr W Guo, School of Engineering, University of Warwick
Professor S Li, Sch of Computing, University of Kent
Dr C Long, School of Water, Energy and Environmen, Cranfield University
Dr AT Zagorecki, School of Defence and Security, Cranfield University
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Oxfordshire County Council
Project Contact, Animal Health Trust
Project Contact, University of Bath
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
Mobility as a service (MaaS) concept offers a user a unified service that combines various forms of transport at a single gateway. MaaS carries a promise of reduction of traffic congestion, improvement of customer convenience, reduction of social inequalities and carbon emissions by fostering the use of public transport. Key enablers for MaaS encompass (1) a single application allowing to plan and conduct journeys, (2) software system allowing multiple actors deliver MaaS, and (3) AI-based analytics allowing journey and resource optimisation. All those are susceptible to a wide range of types of cyber-attacks and the complexity of the MaaS ecosystem (customers, transportation providers, data providers, etc.) and its dependence on the data creates a unique challenge from the cyber security perspective.This interdisciplinary proposal leverages leading research expertise and excellence on energy transitions, infrastructure systems modelling, and artificial intelligence from Cranfield University and cybersecurity and human factors from University of Kent.The ambition is to develop the world's first agent-based modelling framework that will explicitly focus on the cyber security aspects of the MaaS ecosystem. This shall be achieved by use of agent-based simulation techniques to define a modelling framework that will encompass cross-sector and cross-organizational agent interactions in the context of mobility, data sharing, and cybersecurity threats. While our ambition is defining a comprehensive view of the MaaS ecosystem, the proposal intends to focus on a MaaS customers' perspective: incentives, behaviours in both terms of transportation needs and cybersecurity behaviours and attitudes - this will be achieved by developing agent-based simulation with complex, adaptive agents who are capable optimise their behaviour.One of key enablers of the MaaS ecosystem is exploitation of data by means of predictive Artificial Intelligence (AI) models. It has been widely accepted that machine learning and AI algorithms can be exploited by malicious actors using sophisticated cyber attacks. One of the proposed work streams will explore how the rapid deployment of new deep learning algorithms by service providers can be adversarially fooled to create unfairness and failures in the individual sectors and in the wider MaaS ecosystem and how this can be effectively mitigated in a wide range of case studies.The practical value of the framework and its ability to capture interdependencies between physical aspects of MaaS and cyber domain will be validated by means of integration of case studies data. The validity of model definition and produced outputs will be reviewed during a series of expert workshops and knowledge dissemination activities. These would be attended by stakeholders and subject matter experts comprising a mix of representatives of academics, government, regulators and industry, including our past/ current collaborators such as Ofgem, NationalRail, local authorities, bus operators, Data Communications Company, and commercial providers developing integrated technologies or services (e.g. IBM). The public acceptability of the developed MaaS scenarios and strategies to make them secure will be analysed in focus groups.The final report will discuss insights and lessons learned from development of a cross-sector cyber security framework, the fitness of existing institutional landscape for the development of MaaS and opportunities, barriers and risks for the alignment of policy and regulatory frameworks across communications, transport and energy systems to address potential conflicts and vulnerabilities from the cyber security perspective.
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Added to Database
12/11/21