Wednesday, October 15, 2025

 

Training the grid to spot cyberattacks without seeing your data



Singapore University of Technology and Design
Picture 1 

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Conceptual architecture of federated learning for smart-grid intrusion detection. The illustration shows a three-tier structure—local, edge, and central levels—where model updates are aggregated without transferring raw data, supporting privacy-preserving analysis

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Credit: SUTD





Modern power grids depend on constant chatter. Smart meters, gateways, and control centres exchange data every second to balance demand, bill accurately, and keep electricity flowing. That connectivity, however, is also a vulnerability. Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks—malicious attempts to flood a server with excessive, fake traffic—can delay readings, disrupt operations, and at worst, trigger outages.

 

With 6G networks on the horizon, researchers at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) anticipate a denser, faster, and more automated grid. As such, they explored how to detect DDoS attacks early and at scale without exposing people’s energy-use data in their paper, “Towards enhancing security for upcoming 6G-ready smart grids through federated learning and cloud solutions”.

 

Led by Professor Yeo Kiat Seng, the research team built and tested a prototype  intrusion-detection framework that trains models where the data live (on devices), coordinates learning in the cloud, and conceptually aligns with the ultra-low latency and high device density expected of future 6G networks.

 

Federated learning forms the crux of their solution: instead of sending raw meter data to a central server, each device trains a local model and shares only model updates. A cloud coordinator then aggregates the updates to improve a global model and redistributes them to devices, so that the whole fleet learns collaboratively while private data stays put. This combination of federated learning at the edge with cloud coordination shows how the use of design, artificial intelligence (AI), and technology could create a grid that is both smarter and more secure.

 

“Our work is an exploratory step towards understanding how federated learning and cloud technologies could help secure future smart grids as 6G environments emerge,” explained Prof Yeo, who added that their work is complementary to, and not a replacement of, existing measures.

 

To explore feasibility, the team built two proof-of-concept testbeds under controlled experimental conditions. In the first, Raspberry Pi devices stood in for smart meters, training local models and sending updates to a workstation that played the role of a small base station. In the second, they simulated meters in Amazon Web Services (AWS), using virtual elastic compute cloud (EC2) instances equipped with Greengrass for local training and AWS Lambda functions for coordination. Other AWS services such as IoT Core, S3, DynamoDB, and Step Functions were used to manage messaging, data storage, and orchestration within the simulated environment.

 

“It’s important to note that we did not use a live 6G network,” shared Prof Yeo. “Taken together, our two prototypes illustrated how federated learning at the edge can be supported by cloud coordination, and how projected 6G features—such as very low latency, high device density, and high throughput—could further enable fast and privacy-preserving updates across many devices in future smart grids.”

 

The researchers evaluated several models, including logistic regression, a feed-forward neural network, and a one-dimensional convolutional neural network (1D-CNN), on a widely used benchmark of DDoS traffic (CIC-DDoS2019). A residual-CNN, designed to learn deeper temporal patterns and avoid vanishing gradients, performed best on the device testbed, reaching about 97.9 percent accuracy with strong precision and recall.

 

Importantly, when the same approach was run in the cloud-based prototype under controlled experimental conditions, performance remained broadly consistent. Using permutation tests, the team found no statistically significant differences in average precision, recall, or accuracy between the local and cloud runs—results that are encouraging for future large-scale coordination.

 

Practical measurements were equally important. On Raspberry Pi devices, the team quantified memory and CPU usage, power draw, training time, and communication overhead across models and rounds of federated training. The residual-CNN delivered the strongest detection but consumed more resources, pointing to real-world trade-offs. Scaling studies from 4 to 64 simulated nodes showed faster convergence and better precision/recall as more devices participated, while also revealing the growing share of time devoted to communication. These results suggest that bandwidth and orchestration will become increasingly important as such systems scale.

 

While the results are promising, the team remains cautious. Their solution is a research-stage framework validated on benchmark datasets and prototypes, not a live utility deployment.

 

“Our research is at the proof-of-concept stage, so the immediate application lies in providing a framework and experimental insights showing how federated learning with cloud integration could potentially enhance intrusion detection in smart grids,” described Prof Yeo.

 

He highlights that adoption would require pilots with real grid data, integration with existing defences (from authentication to rate-limiting), and alignment with regulations. The team also sees room to compare model families, such as transformer-based architectures, and to incorporate semi-supervised techniques (for example, pseudo-labelling) to learn from the large volumes of unlabelled traffic common in operational networks.

 

“As 6G brings denser connectivity and ultra-low latency communication, cyberthreats will also evolve,” Prof Yeo noted. “We need defences that learn continuously from diverse, local data while ensuring sensitive grid information stays protected. That’s the promise of federated learning—only if we pair it with careful engineering and rigorous validation.”

 

For utilities, the near-term value is directional. The study maps how a privacy-preserving detection layer could sit alongside current intrusion-detection systems, what resources edge devices would need, and how cloud services might orchestrate training and updates. It also highlights early bottlenecks, such as power budgets, bandwidth, and synchronisation, that must be tackled before real-world rollout.

 

The SUTD team’s next steps include gathering datasets that pair network traffic with physical measurements (voltage, current), testing adaptive schemes that adjust models to threat levels and grid conditions, and exploring energy-efficient variants for resource-constrained devices.

 

“Together with utility partners, we hope to translate the prototypes into collaborative pilot studies that measure detection quality, latency, and operational impact in the field,” added Prof Yeo.


Testosterone doesn’t affect men’s economic decisions, large study shows



Stockholm School of Economics
Anna Dreber 

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Anna Dreber, Professor at the School of Economics. Photo: Juliana Wiklund

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Credit: Juliana Wiklund




Testosterone has long been linked to risk-taking, generosity, and competitiveness. But a new large-scale study – the biggest of its kind – finds that men given testosterone made the same economic choices as those given a placebo. The study, led by researchers at the Stockholm School of Economics in Sweden and Nipissing University in Canada, examined things like men’s inclination to take risk, act fairly or compete with others.

“Earlier studies, often based on small samples, suggested that testosterone might impact our willingness to take risk or compete in economic settings,” says co-lead author Anna Dreber, Professor at the Department of Economics at SSE. “But in this substantially larger experiment where we have also pregistered how we would do the analysis prior to observing the data to avoid bias, we do not find any effects of testosterone on economic decision making. Our findings give us strong evidence that short-term testosterone boosts don’t meaningfully change men’s economic choices.”

Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the study included 1,000 men – ten to 20 times more than typical prior studies – between 18 to 45 years old who were recruited between 2018 and 2023 at three locations in Canada. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either a single dose of 11 milligrams testosterone or a placebo, both administered through the nose, in a double-blind trial. After waiting 30 minutes for the hormone to take effect, the participants took part in a series of well-known decision-making games and tasks used in behavioral economics. These tasks measured things like risk taking, generosity, willingness to compete and fairness preferences.

The result showed no statistically significant effect of testosterone on any of the nine main outcomes. Men who received testosterone behaved, on average, the same as those who received the placebo.

Challenges popular narrative

“This study is significant because it directly challenges the narrative that short-term fluctuations in testosterone explain why some people take bigger economic risks, reject unfair deals, or act more competitively in life,” says co-lead author Justin M. Carré, Professor at the Faculty of Arts and Science at Nipissing University in Canada.

That doesn’t mean testosterone has no role in behavior. The researchers caution that their study tested only one dosage and timing in men. Different effects might also emerge under alternative dosages or during long-term hormone fluctuations. Also, women were not part of the trial, leaving open questions for future research.

“Our findings underscore the value of replication with larger samples and preregistered designs. Findings reported from small experiments can vanish when tested more rigorously,” says co-lead author Magnus Johannesson, Professor at the Department of Economics at SSE.

In addition to SSE and Nipissing University, the study involved researchers at University of Pennsylvania, University of the Fraser Valley, The University of Osaka, University of Colorado, University College London, and Oakland University.

Financing were provided by the Jan Wallander and Tom Hedelius Foundation, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation and Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, the NSF Early Career Development Program, and The Wharton School Dean’s Research fund.

Publication: “Investigating the effects of single-dose intranasal testosterone on economic preferences in a large randomized trial of men”, Anna Dreber et al, online Sept. 23, 2025, PNAS, doi: 10.1073/pnas.250851912

About the Stockholm School of Economics

The Stockholm School of Economics is rated as a top business school in the Nordic and Baltic countries and enjoys a strong international reputation. World-class research forms the foundation of our educational offering, which includes bachelor, master, PhD, MBA, and Executive Education programs. Our programs are developed in close cooperation with the business and research communities, providing graduates substantial potential to attain leading positions in companies and other organizations. 

The School is accredited by EQUIS, certifying that all of its principal activities – teaching as well as research – maintain the highest international standards. The Stockholm School of Economics is also the only Swedish member institution of CEMS and PIM, which are collaborations between top business schools worldwide, contributing to the level of quality for which our school is known. 

 

50+ couples’ (un)happiness is interrelated





University of Eastern Finland




Life satisfaction among spouses aged over 50 is strongly interrelated, according to a longitudinal study by the University of Eastern Finland and the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare. The extensive European-wide study of nearly 25,000 couples also showed that factors related to health and socioeconomic status did not alter the association of life satisfaction between spouses.

“It is well known that being in a relationship generally increases well-being and life satisfaction, as do other well-functioning social relationships. In many ways, we are dependent on the people around us, and their experiences and challenges are also reflected in ourselves,” says Doctoral Researcher Terhi Auvinen from the University of Eastern Finland.

The study is based on data from the comprehensive European Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement (SHARE). For 20 years, SHARE has been collecting data on the health, finances and social relationships of people aged over 50. Data are collected every two years, currently from 28 European countries.

“SHARE enables us to seek solutions to questions and consequences related to population ageing. For decision-makers, it provides reliable and comparable information to support policymaking,” says Professor Ismo Linnosmaa of the University of Eastern Finland.

Responsibility for caregiving and health problems affect the association with life satisfaction

According to the study, the association of spouses’ life satisfaction becomes weaker in situations where only one of them bears responsibility for caregiving, or when health problems affect only one of them. According to the researchers, this may be explained by a shift in relationship dynamics from a reciprocal, intimate bond towards a more clinical caregiver–care recipient relationship, where emotional distance serves as a protective factor.

No gender differences were observed in the study. A woman’s life satisfaction explains their male partner’s life satisfaction just as much as a man’s life satisfaction explains their female partner’s. However, a woman’s life satisfaction was more strongly explained by their male partner’s life satisfaction in situations where the woman had a small social network.

“Women with a broad social network may be emotionally less dependent on their partner. However, the size of a man’s social network did not have an effect on how strongly their partner’s life satisfaction influenced their own,” Auvinen says.

The study included only heterosexual couples due to the small number of same-sex couples.

Country-specific differences in the association of spouses’ life satisfaction

There were country-specific differences in the strength of the association of spouses’ life satisfaction. The association was strongest in Bulgaria, Greece, Hungary and Slovakia, while it was weaker in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland. The countries with a weaker association tend to have higher overall levels of life satisfaction and a more individualistic culture.

“It would be interesting to explore these country-specific differences in more detail in future research.”

The findings reinforce the idea of well-being as a shared experience, which should be considered when designing interventions and care programmes for older adults.

“If one partner is not doing well, there is a high risk that the other’s life satisfaction will not improve either. Also, when assessing the cost-effectiveness of different measures, the benefits achieved may be underestimated if externalities are overlooked and partners are considered separately.”

The study constitutes part of the Economic and Social Sustainability Across Time and Space in an Ageing Society project, SustAgeable, funded by the Strategic Research Council at the Research Council of Finland.