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Deep Learning for Android Malware Defenses: a Systematic Literature Review

Published 9 Mar 2021 in cs.CR, cs.LG, and cs.SE | (2103.05292v3)

Abstract: Malicious applications (particularly those targeting the Android platform) pose a serious threat to developers and end-users. Numerous research efforts have been devoted to developing effective approaches to defend against Android malware. However, given the explosive growth of Android malware and the continuous advancement of malicious evasion technologies like obfuscation and reflection, Android malware defense approaches based on manual rules or traditional machine learning may not be effective. In recent years, a dominant research field called deep learning (DL), which provides a powerful feature abstraction ability, has demonstrated a compelling and promising performance in a variety of areas, like natural language processing and computer vision. To this end, employing deep learning techniques to thwart Android malware attacks has recently garnered considerable research attention. Yet, no systematic literature review focusing on deep learning approaches for Android Malware defenses exists. In this paper, we conducted a systematic literature review to search and analyze how deep learning approaches have been applied in the context of malware defenses in the Android environment. As a result, a total of 132 studies covering the period 2014-2021 were identified. Our investigation reveals that, while the majority of these sources mainly consider DL-based on Android malware detection, 53 primary studies (40.1 percent) design defense approaches based on other scenarios. This review also discusses research trends, research focuses, challenges, and future research directions in DL-based Android malware defenses.

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