UCD Forensics and Security Research Group

Digital Forensics and Cybersecurity

Forensics and Security Research Group

Academic cybersecurity and digital forensics research group spanning University College Dublin and South East Technological University.

Research Focus

The Forensics and Security Research Group conducts research in digital forensics, cybersecurity, network investigation, artificial intelligence for forensic workflows, cloud and IoT forensics, and digital forensic education.

Founded in University College Dublin and now expanded through collaboration with South East Technological University, the group works with academic, law-enforcement, and industry partners on research that improves the reliability, scalability, and practical impact of digital investigations.

Digital Forensics Network Investigation AI for Forensics Cloud and IoT Evidence Forensic Readiness Education and Training

Latest

News

All News

Plug to Place: Indoor Multimedia Geolocation from Electrical Sockets for Digital Investigation

This paper presents a novel approach to indoor multimedia geolocation using electrical sockets as consistent indoor markers for geolocation. A three-stage deep learning pipeline detects plug sockets, classifies them into standardized types, and maps them to countries. The approach is evaluated on the Hotels-50K dataset and demonstrates its practical utility for law enforcement in human trafficking investigations.

Objects as Universal Geolocation Cues: A Computer Vision Approach

This paper proposes a computer vision approach to geolocation using universal visual cues, specifically electrical plug sockets, to narrow down the search space for law enforcement in combating crimes such as human trafficking and child exploitation.

New DFRWS EU 2026 Publications

The group has new work appearing at DFRWS EU 2026 and in Forensic Science International: Digital Investigation.

Recent Output

Selected Publications

Full Publications List
2026

Objects as Universal Geolocation Cues: A Computer Vision Approach

Kanwal Aftab; Mark Scanlon

13th Annual Digital Forensics Research Workshop Europe (DFRWS EU 2026)

This paper proposes a computer vision approach to geolocation using universal visual cues, specifically electrical plug sockets, to narrow down the search space for law enforcement in combating crimes such as human trafficking and child exploitation.

2026

Plug to place: Indoor multimedia geolocation from electrical sockets for digital investigation

Kanwal Aftab; Graham Adams; Mark Scanlon

Forensic Science International: Digital Investigation Vol. 56 pp. 302056

This paper presents a novel approach to indoor multimedia geolocation using electrical sockets as consistent indoor markers for geolocation. A three-stage deep learning pipeline detects plug sockets, classifies them into standardized types, and maps them to countries. The approach is evaluated on the Hotels-50K dataset and demonstrates its practical utility for law enforcement in human trafficking investigations.