It looks like you’re searching for a USB network joystick driver related to a file named 370aexe (possibly a typo or shorthand for 370a.exe or a model number) with a reference to 12 (maybe version 12, Windows 12 compatibility, or part of the driver name).
Based on common patterns for obscure or generic USB game controller drivers (especially older or Chinese-market devices), here’s what might help: usb+network+joystick+driver+370aexe+12
The "USB Network Joystick Driver" (specifically version 3.70A) is a third-party driver package often used to enable generic USB controllers, arcade fight sticks, or custom DIY peripherals to function properly on Windows. It looks like you’re searching for a USB
Most commonly, it is associated with Xbox 360 Controller Emulation. It allows older or generic hardware to "trick" Windows into thinking the connected device is an official Xbox 360 pad. This is crucial for games that strictly support XInput (the modern controller standard) but don't recognize your generic controller. Example fake driver sites push Driver_370a
Many browser hijackers, fake driver updaters, and trojans use randomly generated strings like 370aexe combined with keywords for SEO poisoning.
Driver_370a.exe or 370aexe12.dll as “USB Network Joystick Driver.”Possible corrections:
In that case, no academic paper exists — you’d instead look for:
370a.exe – Some generic USB joystick drivers (e.g., for “USB Joystick 3D” or “Twin USB Joystick”) use numbered executables like 370a.exe as the installer.370A could be a PCB or device model for a 12-button USB gamepad/joystick.