66,735 research outputs found
Heisenberg Groups as Platform for the AAG key-exchange protocol
Garber, Kahrobaei, and Lam studied polycyclic groups generated by number
field as platform for the AAG key-exchange protocol. In this paper, we discuss
the use of a different kind of polycyclic groups, Heisenberg groups, as a
platform group for AAG by submitting Heisenberg groups to one of AAG's major
attacks, the length-based attack.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1305.054
Public Key Cryptography based on Semigroup Actions
A generalization of the original Diffie-Hellman key exchange in
found a new depth when Miller and Koblitz suggested that such a protocol could
be used with the group over an elliptic curve. In this paper, we propose a
further vast generalization where abelian semigroups act on finite sets. We
define a Diffie-Hellman key exchange in this setting and we illustrate how to
build interesting semigroup actions using finite (simple) semirings. The
practicality of the proposed extensions rely on the orbit sizes of the
semigroup actions and at this point it is an open question how to compute the
sizes of these orbits in general and also if there exists a square root attack
in general. In Section 2 a concrete practical semigroup action built from
simple semirings is presented. It will require further research to analyse this
system.Comment: 20 pages. To appear in Advances in Mathematics of Communication
Security for Grid Services
Grid computing is concerned with the sharing and coordinated use of diverse
resources in distributed "virtual organizations." The dynamic and
multi-institutional nature of these environments introduces challenging
security issues that demand new technical approaches. In particular, one must
deal with diverse local mechanisms, support dynamic creation of services, and
enable dynamic creation of trust domains. We describe how these issues are
addressed in two generations of the Globus Toolkit. First, we review the Globus
Toolkit version 2 (GT2) approach; then, we describe new approaches developed to
support the Globus Toolkit version 3 (GT3) implementation of the Open Grid
Services Architecture, an initiative that is recasting Grid concepts within a
service oriented framework based on Web services. GT3's security implementation
uses Web services security mechanisms for credential exchange and other
purposes, and introduces a tight least-privilege model that avoids the need for
any privileged network service.Comment: 10 pages; 4 figure
How effective is the Forestry Commission Scotland's woodland improvement programme--'Woods In and Around Towns' (WIAT)--at improving psychological well-being in deprived urban communities? A quasi-experimental study
Introduction: There is a growing body of evidence that suggests that green spaces may positively influence psychological well-being. This project is designed to take advantage of a natural experiment where planned physical and social interventions to enhance access to natural environments in deprived communities provide an opportunity to prospectively assess impacts on perceived stress and mental well-being.<p></p>
Study design and methods: A controlled, prospective study comprising a repeat cross-sectional survey of residents living within 1.5 km of intervention and comparison sites. Three waves of data will be collected: prephysical environment intervention (2013); postphysical environment intervention (2014) and postwoodland promotion social intervention (2015). The primary outcome will be a measure of perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale) preintervention and postintervention. Secondary, self-report outcomes include: mental well-being (Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale), changes in physical activity (IPAQ-short form), health (EuroQoL EQ-5D), perception and use of the woodlands, connectedness to nature (Inclusion of Nature in Self Scale), social cohesion and social capital. An environmental audit will complement the study by evaluating the physical changes in the environment over time and recording any other contextual changes over time. A process evaluation will assess the implementation of the programme. A health economics analysis will assess the cost consequences of each stage of the intervention in relation to the primary and secondary outcomes of the study.<p></p>
Ethics and dissemination: Ethical approval has been given by the University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh College of Art Research, Ethics and Knowledge Exchange Committee (ref. 19/06/2012). Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, national and international conferences and, at the final stage of the project, through a workshop for those interested in implementing environmental interventions.<p></p>
Length-based cryptanalysis: The case of Thompson's Group
The length-based approach is a heuristic for solving randomly generated
equations in groups which possess a reasonably behaved length function. We
describe several improvements of the previously suggested length-based
algorithms, that make them applicable to Thompson's group with significant
success rates. In particular, this shows that the Shpilrain-Ushakov public key
cryptosystem based on Thompson's group is insecure, and suggests that no
practical public key cryptosystem based on this group can be secure.Comment: Final version, to appear in JM
The Emerging Scholarly Brain
It is now a commonplace observation that human society is becoming a coherent
super-organism, and that the information infrastructure forms its emerging
brain. Perhaps, as the underlying technologies are likely to become billions of
times more powerful than those we have today, we could say that we are now
building the lizard brain for the future organism.Comment: to appear in Future Professional Communication in Astronomy-II
(FPCA-II) editors A. Heck and A. Accomazz
Doing research on the effectiveness of psychotherapy and psychotherapy training: a person-centered/experiential perspective
In this article, we present a framework for selecting instruments for evaluating psychotherapy and psychotherapy training from a person-centered and experiential psychotherapy (PCEP) perspective. The protocol is divided into eight therapy measurement domains, consisting of four research themes (therapy outcome, therapy process, client predictors, training outcome) and two levels (general/pan-theoretical concepts vs. treatment specific/PCEP-oriented concepts). This research protocol provides recommendations about what to measure, encouraging collaboration across different training sites, while still allowing flexibility for individual centers. Minimum and systematic case study data collection designs are described: Minimum designs are appropriate for use in private practice settings with one's own clients; systematic case-study designs can be used for student case-presentation requirements or for publication. The framework and research protocols described are part of an emerging international research project involving private and public training centers in several countries
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