Communication Security and Sensing Privacy in FMCW-Based ISAC Through Signal Modulation
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 03:55 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Index modulation and phase coding over FMCW chirps secure data transmission while making velocity estimation infeasible for passive sensing eavesdroppers.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The proposed framework employs index modulation and phase coding over FMCW chirps to provide robust physical layer security for data transmission while simultaneously enhancing sensing privacy by rendering target velocity estimation practically infeasible for unauthorized passive sensing hardware and significantly impairing its range estimation capabilities.
What carries the argument
Index modulation combined with explicitly designed phase coding applied to FMCW chirps, which perturbs the resulting ambiguity function.
If this is right
- High data throughput remains achievable alongside the added security layers.
- Legitimate receiver architectures support both communication demodulation and sensing operations without degradation.
- Unauthorized passive hardware cannot perform reliable velocity estimation.
- Range estimation accuracy at the eavesdropper is substantially reduced.
- The transmitter architecture enables the combined index modulation and phase coding on each chirp.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same waveform perturbation principle could be tested on other continuous-wave radar waveforms beyond FMCW.
- Systems deploying this design may need new regulatory guidelines for spectrum sharing that account for built-in sensing privacy.
- Combining the physical-layer approach with conventional encryption could create layered security without additional spectrum overhead.
- Hardware implementations would need to verify that the phase coding does not introduce unexpected peak-to-average power ratio increases.
Load-bearing premise
The phase coding can be designed to perturb the ambiguity function enough to impair an eavesdropper's velocity and range estimation while leaving the legitimate receiver's sensing and communication performance intact, assuming the eavesdropper is restricted to passive sensing hardware.
What would settle it
An experiment in which a passive sensing eavesdropper accurately recovers target velocity from the modulated FMCW signal despite the phase coding would falsify the central claim.
Figures
read the original abstract
This study proposes a novel radar-centric signaling design and architecture for secure integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems. The proposed framework is designed to provide robust physical layer security for data transmission while simultaneously enhancing sensing privacy. It employs index modulation and phase coding over frequency-modulated continuous-wave radar (FMCW) chirps, where index modulation (IM) provides an outer layer of data security, and we explicitly design the phase coding (PC) to perturb the resulting signal's ambiguity function (AF) to enhance sensing privacy. This design reduces the risk of unauthorized surveillance by rendering target velocity estimation practically infeasible for unauthorized passive sensing hardware (i.e., a sensing eavesdropper, S-Eve) and significantly impairing its range estimation capabilities. Furthermore, this study also presents the transmitter and receiver architectures required for effective modulation and demodulation of the proposed ISAC signaling and for performing sensing at the legitimate sensing hardware. Simulation results show that the proposed approach achieves high data throughput while enhancing communication security and sensing privacy.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes a radar-centric ISAC signaling scheme that combines index modulation (IM) with explicitly designed phase coding (PC) applied to FMCW chirps. IM is intended to add an outer layer of communication security, while PC is designed to perturb the transmitted waveform's ambiguity function (AF) so that a passive sensing eavesdropper (S-Eve) cannot reliably estimate target velocity and suffers degraded range estimation. The manuscript presents transmitter and receiver architectures for modulation/demodulation and legitimate sensing, and reports simulation results indicating high data throughput together with the claimed security and privacy gains.
Significance. If the selective-impairment claim can be rigorously established, the work would offer a concrete waveform-level mechanism for simultaneously protecting communication confidentiality and sensing privacy in FMCW-based ISAC, an area of growing practical interest. The explicit presentation of end-to-end transmitter/receiver architectures and the use of standard FMCW waveforms are positive features that could facilitate reproducibility and extension.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract / receiver architectures] Abstract and receiver-architecture section: the AF is a property of the transmitted waveform alone. The manuscript must therefore demonstrate, with explicit matched-filter or correlator derivations and quantitative AF plots or metrics, that the legitimate receiver (using knowledge of the PC) fully restores a clean AF while an S-Eve without that knowledge cannot. No such compensation analysis or residual-degradation bounds appear to be provided; without them the selective-privacy claim rests on an unverified assumption.
- [Simulation results] Simulation-results section: performance claims for both communication security and sensing privacy are reported, yet the text supplies neither the exact simulation parameters (chirp bandwidth, duration, SNR ranges, number of Monte-Carlo trials) nor error bars or statistical significance tests. This prevents independent verification of the reported throughput and privacy gains.
minor comments (2)
- [Transmitter architecture] Notation for the phase code and index-modulation mapping should be introduced with a single consistent table or equation block rather than scattered across the architecture diagrams.
- [Abstract] The abstract states that velocity estimation is rendered 'practically infeasible'; the manuscript should replace this qualitative statement with a concrete metric (e.g., CRLB degradation factor or probability of correct velocity estimate) in the privacy-analysis subsection.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments, which help clarify the presentation of our results. We address each major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract / receiver architectures] Abstract and receiver-architecture section: the AF is a property of the transmitted waveform alone. The manuscript must therefore demonstrate, with explicit matched-filter or correlator derivations and quantitative AF plots or metrics, that the legitimate receiver (using knowledge of the PC) fully restores a clean AF while an S-Eve without that knowledge cannot. No such compensation analysis or residual-degradation bounds appear to be provided; without them the selective-privacy claim rests on an unverified assumption.
Authors: We agree that the ambiguity function is determined by the transmitted waveform. The legitimate receiver applies a compensation step using its knowledge of the phase coding within the matched-filter/correlator processing. In the revised manuscript we will add the explicit matched-filter derivations for both the compensated (legitimate) and uncompensated (S-Eve) cases, together with quantitative AF plots and residual-degradation metrics that demonstrate restoration of the clean AF at the legitimate receiver. revision: yes
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Referee: [Simulation results] Simulation-results section: performance claims for both communication security and sensing privacy are reported, yet the text supplies neither the exact simulation parameters (chirp bandwidth, duration, SNR ranges, number of Monte-Carlo trials) nor error bars or statistical significance tests. This prevents independent verification of the reported throughput and privacy gains.
Authors: We acknowledge the omission. The revised manuscript will list all exact simulation parameters (chirp bandwidth, duration, SNR ranges, number of Monte-Carlo trials) and will include error bars on all performance curves together with any applicable statistical significance information. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; design proposal with no self-referential reductions
full rationale
The provided abstract and description outline a proposed ISAC signaling architecture using index modulation and explicitly designed phase coding on FMCW chirps to achieve security and privacy goals. No equations, fitted parameters, or derivations are shown that reduce by construction to the inputs (e.g., no self-definitional AF perturbation that is both the input and the claimed output, no fitted quantities renamed as predictions). No self-citations are invoked as load-bearing for uniqueness theorems or ansatzes. The central content is a design proposal plus simulation results, which remain independent of the enumerated circular patterns and do not require the result to be presupposed in the inputs.
discussion (0)
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