FSECAD: Feature-Selected Explainable Cloud Anomaly Detection Framework
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58414/SCIENTIFICTEMPER.2026.17.2.04Keywords:
Cloud anomaly detection, Explainable AI (XAI), Feature selection, Ensemble learning, Real-time security, Dimensionality reduction, CloudOpsDimensions Badge
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 The Scientific Temper

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
High-dimensional telemetry data is constantly generated by modern cloud platforms, which presents serious scalability, interpretability, and real-time performance difficulties for anomaly detection. Despite the fact that ensemble-based detectors frequently attain excellent accuracy, feature redundancy, opaque decision-making, and significant computing overhead restrict their applications.Abstract
This paper introduces FSECAD (Feature-Selected Explainable Cloud Anomaly Detection), an effective and interpretable framework designed for cloud telemetry streams, to overcome these drawbacks. Compact, transparent, and production-ready anomaly detection is made possible by FSECAD’s integration of Stability-Aware Hybrid Feature Selection (SHFS) and Feature-Centric Explainable Anomaly Attribution (FCEA). By simultaneously improving relevance, redundancy, and stability across time windows, SHFS lowers the initial 41-dimensional feature space to 11 temporally stable and highly discriminative features. ration layer. In comparison to baseline approaches, experimental evaluation on typical cloud benchmarks shows a 92.8% F1-score, 67% shorter inference latency, and 73% lower memory use. All things considered, FSECAD offers a reliable and efficient solution for scalable anomaly detection in cloud settings.
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- Surender Singh, Deep Lal, Rachna Thakur, Suchitra Devi, Socio-economic Compulsions on Climate Change and Energy Security of India , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 13 No. 02 (2022): The Scientific Temper
- Nilesh Anute, Geetali Tilak, Revolutionizing e-Learning with AR, VR, And AI , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 04 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Anita Yadav, Neerja Kapoor, Shivji Malviya, Sandeep K. Malhotra, COVID-19 Pandemic and the Global Vaccine Strategy , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 11 No. 1&2 (2020): The Scientific Temper
- Sindhu S, L. Arockiam, DRMF: Optimizing machine learning accuracy in IoT crop recommendation with domain rules and MissForest imputation , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 03 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Panda Aditi Ambarish, Kaushik Trivedi, Immersive learning: A virtual reality teaching model for enhancing english speaking skills , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. spl-2 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Harshaben Raghubhai Pankuta, Kusum R. Yadav, Assessing students’ perception of the academic features of the Gyankunj Project , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. Spl-1 (2025): The Scientific Temper
- R. Saarumathi, Logistics Optimization Through Composite Payday Installment in Favor of Requisite Ultimatum Vacillating Carrying Cost and Gradual Degeneration Under Non-stocked and Continuous Circumstances Using Hexagonal Fuzzy Number , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 17 No. 01 (2026): The Scientific Temper
- Punithavathy E, N. Priya, A resilience framework for fault-tolerance in cloud-based microservice applications , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 03 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Hemang Shah, Archana Gadekar, Artificial intelligence and intellectual property rights with special reference to patent and copyright , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. spl-2 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Brigith Gladys L, J. Merline Vinotha, Sustainable rough multi-objective two-stage solid transportation problem of third-party e-commerce logistic providers with conditional fixed parameter on safety , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 01 (2025): The Scientific Temper
<< < 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- K. Vani, S. Sujatha, Fault tolerance systems in open source cloud computing environments–A systematic review , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 14 No. 03 (2023): The Scientific Temper
- M. Merla Agnes Mary, S. Britto Ramesh Kumar, DAJO: A Robust Machine Learning–Based Framework for Preprocessing and Denoising Fetal ECG Signals , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 09 (2025): The Scientific Temper

