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Fuzzy extractors: How to generate strong keys from biometrics and other noisy data. Technical Report 2003/235, Cryptology ePrint archive, http://eprint.iacr.org, 2006. Previous version appeared at EUROCRYPT 2004
- 34 [DRS07] [DS05] [EHMS00] [FJ01] Yevgeniy Dodis, Leonid Reyzin, and Adam
, 2004
"... We provide formal definitions and efficient secure techniques for • turning noisy information into keys usable for any cryptographic application, and, in particular, • reliably and securely authenticating biometric data. Our techniques apply not just to biometric information, but to any keying mater ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 180 (19 self)
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We provide formal definitions and efficient secure techniques for • turning noisy information into keys usable for any cryptographic application, and, in particular, • reliably and securely authenticating biometric data. Our techniques apply not just to biometric information, but to any keying material that, unlike traditional cryptographic keys, is (1) not reproducible precisely and (2) not distributed uniformly. We propose two primitives: a fuzzy extractor reliably extracts nearly uniform randomness R from its input; the extraction is error-tolerant in the sense that R will be the same even if the input changes, as long as it remains reasonably close to the original. Thus, R can be used as a key in a cryptographic application. A secure sketch produces public information about its input w that does not reveal w, and yet allows exact recovery of w given another value that is close to w. Thus, it can be used to reliably reproduce error-prone biometric inputs without incurring the security risk inherent in storing them. We define the primitives to be both formally secure and versatile, generalizing much prior work. In addition, we provide nearly optimal constructions of both primitives for various measures of “closeness” of input data, such as Hamming distance, edit distance, and set difference.
XMill: an Efficient Compressor for XML Data
, 1999
"... We describe a tool for compressing XML data, with applications in data exchange and archiving, which usually achieves about twice the compression ratio of gzip at roughly the same speed. The compressor, called XMill, incorporates and combines existing compressors in order to apply them to heterogene ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 165 (0 self)
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We describe a tool for compressing XML data, with applications in data exchange and archiving, which usually achieves about twice the compression ratio of gzip at roughly the same speed. The compressor, called XMill, incorporates and combines existing compressors in order to apply them to heterogeneous XML data: it uses zlib, the library function for gzip, a collection of datatype specific compressors for simple data types, and, possibly, user defined compressors for application specific data types. 1 Introduction We have implemented a compressor/decompressor for XML data, to be used in data exchange and archiving, that achieves about twice the compression rate of general-purpose compressors (gzip), at about the same speed. The tool can be downloaded from www.research.att.com/sw/tools/xmill/. XML is now being adopted by many organizations and industry groups, like the healthcare, banking, chemical, and telecommunications industries. The attraction in XML is that it is a self-describi...
A Channel Access Scheme for Large Dense Packet Radio Networks
- In Proc. ACM SIGCOMM
, 1996
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LeZi-Update: An Information-Theoretic Approach to Track Mobile Users in PCS Networks
, 1999
"... The complexity of the mobility tracking problem in a cellular environment has been characterized under an information-theoretic framework. Shannon’s entropy measure is iden-tified as a basis for comparing user mobility models. By building and maintaining a dictionary of individual user’s path update ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 94 (11 self)
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The complexity of the mobility tracking problem in a cellular environment has been characterized under an information-theoretic framework. Shannon’s entropy measure is iden-tified as a basis for comparing user mobility models. By building and maintaining a dictionary of individual user’s path updates (as opposed to the widely used location up-dates), the proposed adaptive on-line algorithm can learn subscribers’ profiles. This technique evolves out of the con-cepts of lossless compression. The compressibility of the variable-to-fixed length encoding of the acclaimed Lempel-Ziv family of algorithms reduces the update cost, whereas their built-in predictive power can be effectively used to re-duce paging cost.
The Nature of Theory in Information Systems
- MIS Quarterly
, 2006
"... The aim of this research essay is to examine the structural nature of theory in information systems. Despite the importance of theory, questions relating to its form and structure are neglected in comparison with questions relating to epistemology. The essay addresses issues of causality, explanatio ..."
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Cited by 65 (2 self)
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The aim of this research essay is to examine the structural nature of theory in information systems. Despite the importance of theory, questions relating to its form and structure are neglected in comparison with questions relating to epistemology. The essay addresses issues of causality, explanation, prediction and generalization that underlie an understanding of theory. A taxonomy is proposed that classifies information systems theories with respect to the manner in which four central goals are addressed: analysis, explanation, prediction and prescription. Five interrelated types of theory are distinguished: (i) theory for analysing; (ii) theory for explaining, (iii) theory for predicting; (iv) theory for explaining and predicting; and (v) theory for design and action. Examples illustrate the nature of each theory type. The applicability of the taxonomy is demonstrated by classifying a sample of journal articles. The paper contributes by showing that multiple views of theory exist and by exposing the assumptions underlying different viewpoints. In addition, it is suggested that the type of theory under development can influence the choice of an epistemological approach. Support is given for the legitimacy and value of each theory type. The building of integrated bodies of theory that encompass all theory types is advocated.
A chronology of interpolation: From ancient astronomy to modern signal and image processing
- Proceedings of the IEEE
, 2002
"... This paper presents a chronological overview of the developments in interpolation theory, from the earliest times to the present date. It brings out the connections between the results obtained in different ages, thereby putting the techniques currently used in signal and image processing into histo ..."
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Cited by 44 (0 self)
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This paper presents a chronological overview of the developments in interpolation theory, from the earliest times to the present date. It brings out the connections between the results obtained in different ages, thereby putting the techniques currently used in signal and image processing into historical perspective. A summary of the insights and recommendations that follow from relatively recent theoretical as well as experimental studies concludes the presentation. Keywords—Approximation, convolution-based interpolation, history, image processing, polynomial interpolation, signal processing, splines. “It is an extremely useful thing to have knowledge of the true origins of memorable discoveries, especially those that have been found not by accident but by dint of meditation. It is not so much that thereby history may attribute to each man his own discoveries and others should be encouraged to earn like commendation, as that the art of making discoveries should be extended by considering noteworthy examples of it. ” 1 I.
Quantitative Analysis of the Leakage of Confidential Data
, 2001
"... Basic information theory is used to analyse the amount of confidential information which may be leaked by programs written in a very simple imperative language. In particular, a detailed analysis is given of the possible leakage due to equality tests and if statements. The analysis is presented as a ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 42 (4 self)
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Basic information theory is used to analyse the amount of confidential information which may be leaked by programs written in a very simple imperative language. In particular, a detailed analysis is given of the possible leakage due to equality tests and if statements. The analysis is presented as a set of syntax-directed inference rules and can readily be automated.
LeZi-Update: An Information-Theoretic Framework for Personal Mobility Tracking
- in PCS Networks. Wireless Networks
, 2002
"... Abstract. The complexity of the mobility tracking problem in a cellular environment has been characterized under an information-theoretic framework. Shannon’s entropy measure is identified as a basis for comparing user mobility models. By building and maintaining a dictionary of individual user’s pa ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 38 (1 self)
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Abstract. The complexity of the mobility tracking problem in a cellular environment has been characterized under an information-theoretic framework. Shannon’s entropy measure is identified as a basis for comparing user mobility models. By building and maintaining a dictionary of individual user’s path updates (as opposed to the widely used location updates), the proposed adaptive on-line algorithm can learn subscribers ’ profiles. This technique evolves out of the concepts of lossless compression. The compressibility of the variable-to-fixed length encoding of the acclaimed Lempel–Ziv family of algorithms reduces the update cost, whereas their built-in predictive power can be effectively used to reduce paging cost.
Enhanced Word Clustering for Hierarchical Text Classification
, 2002
"... In this paper we propose a new information-theoretic divisive algorithm for word clustering applied to text classification. In previous work, such "distributional clustering" of features has been found to achieve improvements over feature selection in terms of classification accuracy, especially at ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 37 (1 self)
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In this paper we propose a new information-theoretic divisive algorithm for word clustering applied to text classification. In previous work, such "distributional clustering" of features has been found to achieve improvements over feature selection in terms of classification accuracy, especially at lower number of features [2, 28]. However the existing clustering techniques are agglomerative in nature and result in (i) sub-optimal word clusters and (ii) high computational cost. In order to explicitly capture the optimality of word clusters in an information theoretic framework, we first derive a global criterion for feature clustering. We then present a fast, divisive algorithm that monotonically decreases this objective function value, thus converging to a local minimum. We show that our algorithm minimizes the "within-cluster Jensen-Shannon divergence" while simultaneously maximizing the "between-cluster Jensen-Shannon divergence". In comparison to the previously proposed agglomerative strategies our divisive algorithm achieves higher classification accuracy especially at lower number of features. We further show that feature clustering is an effective technique for building smaller class models in hierarchical classification. We present detailed experimental results using Naive Bayes and Support Vector Machines on the 20 Newsgroups data set and a 3-level hierarchy of HTML documents collected from Dmoz Open Directory.
An Edgebreaker-Based Efficient Compression Scheme for Regular Meshes
, 2000
"... One of the most natural measures of regularity of a triangular mesh homeomorphic to the two-dimensional sphere is the fraction of its vertices having degree 6. We construct a linear-time connectivity compression scheme build upon Edgebreaker which explicitly takes advantage of regularity and prove r ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 35 (11 self)
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One of the most natural measures of regularity of a triangular mesh homeomorphic to the two-dimensional sphere is the fraction of its vertices having degree 6. We construct a linear-time connectivity compression scheme build upon Edgebreaker which explicitly takes advantage of regularity and prove rigorously that, for suciently large and regular meshes, it produces encodings not longer than 0:811 bits per triangle: 50% below the information-theoretic lower bound for the class of all meshes. Our method uses predictive techniques enabled by the Spirale Reversi decoding algorithm. 1 Introduction Geometric data is typically represented by meshes, often triangular. Frequently, there is need to access such data via a network connection and, in such cases, bandwidth tends to become a serious obstacle to interactivity. An obvious way out of this problem is to use compressed representations. The standard representation of a triangular mesh consists of two parts: connectivity and vertex coord...

