MARD: A Multi-Agent Framework for Robust Android Malware Detection
Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 15:55 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
MARD lets LLMs orchestrate static analysis tools via multi-agents for robust Android malware detection without fine-tuning.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
MARD is a multi-agent framework that treats deterministic static analysis engines as on-demand tools orchestrated by LLMs using the ReAct paradigm. This allows the construction of interpretable evidentiary chains for malware detection in APKs, achieving an F1 score of 93.46% without fine-tuning, with robustness to concept drift and cross-domain generalization over up to five years of data, at a cost under $0.10 per APK.
What carries the argument
The autonomous multi-agent interaction mechanism based on the ReAct paradigm, which enables LLMs to orchestrate static analysis engines as tools and build evidence chains.
Load-bearing premise
Large language models are capable of reliably selecting and interpreting outputs from static analysis tools to make correct malware determinations in complex Android application packages without any specialized training.
What would settle it
Testing MARD on a new collection of Android apps released after the evaluation period that shows a significant drop in F1 score or frequent failures in building consistent evidence chains.
Figures
read the original abstract
With the rapid evolution of Android applications, traditional machine learning-based detection models suffer from concept drift. Additionally, they are constrained by shallow features, lacking deep semantic understanding and interpretability of decisions. Although Large Language Models (LLMs) demonstrate remarkable semantic reasoning capabilities, directly processing massive raw code incurs prohibitive token overhead. Moreover, this approach fails to fully unleash the deep logical reasoning potential of LLMs within complex contexts. To address these limitations, we propose MARD, a multi-agent framework for robust Android malware detection. This framework effectively bridges the gap between the semantic understanding of LLMs and traditional static analysis. It treats underlying deterministic analysis engines as on-demand execution tools, while utilizing the LLM to orchestrate the entire decision-making process. By designing an autonomous multi-agent interaction mechanism based on the ReAct paradigm, MARD constructs a highly interpretable evidentiary chain for conviction. Furthermore, we radically reduce the total cost of conducting a deep analysis of a single complex APK to under $0.10. Evaluations demonstrate that, without any domain-specific fine-tuning, MARD achieves an F1 score of 93.46%. It not only outperforms continual learning baselines but also exhibits robustness against concept drift and strong cross-domain generalization capabilities in evaluations spanning up to five years.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes MARD, a multi-agent framework that employs large language models (LLMs) under the ReAct paradigm to orchestrate deterministic static-analysis engines as on-demand tools for Android malware detection. It claims an F1 score of 93.46% without domain-specific fine-tuning, superiority over continual-learning baselines, robustness to concept drift, and strong cross-domain generalization across evaluations spanning up to five years, while reducing per-APK analysis cost below $0.10 and constructing interpretable evidentiary chains.
Significance. If the performance and robustness claims are substantiated with complete experimental details, the work could meaningfully advance Android malware detection by bridging LLM semantic reasoning with traditional static analysis, yielding interpretable decisions at low cost without fine-tuning. The reported ability to handle concept drift over multi-year spans and the emphasis on evidentiary chains represent potentially valuable contributions to robust, explainable security systems.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract and Evaluation section] Abstract and Evaluation section: the central performance claim of 93.46% F1, outperformance of continual-learning baselines, and robustness to concept drift are stated without any description of the datasets (size, sources, temporal distribution), evaluation protocol (train/test splits, drift simulation method, cross-domain setup), baseline implementations, or statistical significance tests. This absence prevents assessment of whether the reported results support the no-fine-tuning and generalization assertions.
- [Methodology section] Methodology section: the no-domain-specific-fine-tuning claim rests on the unverified premise that an unmodified LLM can reliably invoke static-analysis tools, correctly interpret their outputs (e.g., decompiled code, permission graphs), and assemble evidentiary chains with negligible error. The manuscript should report quantitative metrics on tool-call success rate, hallucination frequency during feature extraction, and fallback behavior for edge-case APKs; without these, the headline F1 and drift-robustness results cannot be confidently attributed to the framework rather than post-filtering or dataset-specific prompting.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract refers to 'evaluations spanning up to five years' without naming the exact time windows or APK corpora used; adding these concrete details would improve clarity.
- [Methodology] Notation for the multi-agent interaction mechanism and ReAct loop could be formalized with a diagram or pseudocode to make the orchestration process easier to follow.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed feedback. We address each major comment below and outline the revisions we will make to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and Evaluation section] Abstract and Evaluation section: the central performance claim of 93.46% F1, outperformance of continual-learning baselines, and robustness to concept drift are stated without any description of the datasets (size, sources, temporal distribution), evaluation protocol (train/test splits, drift simulation method, cross-domain setup), baseline implementations, or statistical significance tests. This absence prevents assessment of whether the reported results support the no-fine-tuning and generalization assertions.
Authors: We agree that the current presentation of results lacks sufficient detail on datasets and protocols, which limits independent assessment of the claims. In the revised manuscript, we will substantially expand the Evaluation section to include dataset sizes and sources, temporal distributions, exact train/test splits, the procedure for simulating concept drift, cross-domain evaluation setups, descriptions of baseline implementations, and statistical significance testing. These additions will directly support evaluation of the no-fine-tuning and generalization assertions. revision: yes
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Referee: [Methodology section] Methodology section: the no-domain-specific-fine-tuning claim rests on the unverified premise that an unmodified LLM can reliably invoke static-analysis tools, correctly interpret their outputs (e.g., decompiled code, permission graphs), and assemble evidentiary chains with negligible error. The manuscript should report quantitative metrics on tool-call success rate, hallucination frequency during feature extraction, and fallback behavior for edge-case APKs; without these, the headline F1 and drift-robustness results cannot be confidently attributed to the framework rather than post-filtering or dataset-specific prompting.
Authors: We recognize that explicit quantitative evidence of tool-use reliability is required to substantiate the no-fine-tuning claim. Although the ReAct-based multi-agent design and deterministic tool interfaces were intended to limit errors, the original manuscript did not include aggregated metrics on tool-call success rates or hallucination frequency. In the revision we will add these metrics, derived from our existing experimental logs for tool-call success and supplemented by targeted additional runs to quantify hallucination rates during feature extraction. We will also document fallback behaviors for edge-case APKs. These changes will allow readers to attribute performance more confidently to the framework itself. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: empirical framework claims rest on external tools and evaluations
full rationale
The paper describes MARD as an LLM-orchestrated multi-agent system using the external ReAct paradigm to invoke deterministic static-analysis engines on APKs. No equations, fitted parameters, or derivations appear that reduce predictions to inputs by construction. Performance metrics (F1 93.46%, drift robustness) are presented as results of cross-year empirical evaluations rather than self-referential fits or self-citation chains. The core premise relies on independent tool outputs and standard LLM capabilities, making the derivation self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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