The rapid proliferation of low-altitude drones has led to increasingly congested and heterogeneous electromagnetic environments, posing significant challenges to fine-grained spectrum awareness and reliable drone management. Specific emitter identification (SEI), which exploits inherent hardware-dependent radio frequency fingerprints, provides an effective physical-layer solution for emitter-level discrimination. However, practical SEI systems often suffer from two critical issues: extremely limited labeled samples for newly emerging emitters and heterogeneous data distributions collected by geographically distributed receivers with mismatched label spaces. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a heterogeneous federated learning (HFL)-based framework for few-shot specific emitter identification (FS-SEI). The proposed framework decouples feature embedding learning from task-specific classification and enables collaborative representation learning across distributed receivers without sharing raw signal data. A metric learning-based training strategy is adopted, where only the feature embedding models are aggregated in the federated process, effectively alleviating the impact of label space mismatch by utilizing center loss and an improved triplet loss. Moreover, two federated optimization schemes, namely gradient averaging (GA) and model averaging (MA), are systematically investigated to analyze their effectiveness under fully heterogeneous settings. Extensive experiments conducted on a real-world dataset demonstrate that the proposed HFL framework significantly outperforms isolated local training. In particular, the GA-based scheme achieves a few-shot identification performance that closely approaches centralized learning while preserving data privacy and robustness against data heterogeneity. The results validate the effectiveness of the proposed approach for practical FS-SEI in low-altitude drone management scenarios.
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Li Cao
Jianjiang Zhou
Wei Wang
Drones
Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
National Engineering Research Center of Electromagnetic Radiation Control Materials
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Cao et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c62e4eeef8a2a6b175f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/drones10040279
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