11 research outputs found

    Principles of Physical Layer Security in Multiuser Wireless Networks: A Survey

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    This paper provides a comprehensive review of the domain of physical layer security in multiuser wireless networks. The essential premise of physical-layer security is to enable the exchange of confidential messages over a wireless medium in the presence of unauthorized eavesdroppers without relying on higher-layer encryption. This can be achieved primarily in two ways: without the need for a secret key by intelligently designing transmit coding strategies, or by exploiting the wireless communication medium to develop secret keys over public channels. The survey begins with an overview of the foundations dating back to the pioneering work of Shannon and Wyner on information-theoretic security. We then describe the evolution of secure transmission strategies from point-to-point channels to multiple-antenna systems, followed by generalizations to multiuser broadcast, multiple-access, interference, and relay networks. Secret-key generation and establishment protocols based on physical layer mechanisms are subsequently covered. Approaches for secrecy based on channel coding design are then examined, along with a description of inter-disciplinary approaches based on game theory and stochastic geometry. The associated problem of physical-layer message authentication is also introduced briefly. The survey concludes with observations on potential research directions in this area.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, 303 refs. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1303.1609 by other authors. IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials, 201

    Coding theory, information theory and cryptology : proceedings of the EIDMA winter meeting, Veldhoven, December 19-21, 1994

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    Coding theory, information theory and cryptology : proceedings of the EIDMA winter meeting, Veldhoven, December 19-21, 1994

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    Algorithms and architecture for multiusers, multi-terminal, multi-layer information theoretic security

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Includes bibliographical references (p. 161-164).As modern infrastructure systems become increasingly more complex, we are faced with many new challenges in the area of information security. In this thesis we examine some approaches to security based on ideas from information theory. The protocols considered in this thesis, build upon the "wiretap channel," a model for physical layer security proposed by A. Wyner in 1975. At a higher level, the protocols considered here can strengthen existing mechanisms for security by providing a new location based approach at the physical layer.In the first part of this thesis, we extend the wiretap channel model to the case when there are multiple receivers, each experiencing a time varying fading channel. Both the scenario when each legitimate receiver wants a common message as well as the scenario when they all want separate messages are studied and capacity results are established in several special cases. When each receiver wants a separate independent message, an opportunistic scheme that transmits to the strongest user at each time, and uses Gaussian codebooks is shown to achieve the sum secrecy capacity in the limit of many users. When each receiver wants a common message, a lower bound to the capacity is provided, independent of the number of receivers. In the second part of the thesis the role of multiple antennas for secure communication studied. We establish the secrecy capacity of the multi antenna wiretap channel (MIMOME channel), when the channel matrices of the legitimate receiver and eavesdropper are fixed and known to all the terminals. To establish the capacity, a new computable upper bound on the secrecy capacity of the wiretap channel is developed, which may be of independent interest. It is shown that Gaussian codebooks suffice to attain the capacity for this problem. For the case when the legitimate receiver has a single antenna (MISOME channel) a rank one transmission scheme is shown to attain the capacity.(CONT.) In the high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime, it is shown that a capacity achieving scheme involves simultaneous diagonalization of the channel matrices using the generalized singular value decomposition and independently coding accross the resulting parallel channels. Furthermore a semi-blind masked beamforming scheme is studied, which transmits signal of interest in the subspace of the legitimate receiver's channel and synthetic noise in the orthogonal subspace. It is shown that this scheme is nearly optimal in the high SNR regime for the MISOME case and the performance penalty for the MIMOME channel is evaluated in terms of the generalized singular values. The behavior of the secrecy capacity in the limit of many antennas is also studied. When the channel matrices have i.i.d. CN(O, 1) entries, we show that (1) the secrecy capacity for the MISOME channel converges (almost surely) to zero if and only if the eavesdropper increases its antennas at a rate twice as fast as the sender (2) when a total of T >> 1 antennas have to be allocated between the sender and the receiver, the optimal allocation, which maximizes the number of eavesdropping antennas for zero secrecy capacity is 2 : 1. In the final part of the thesis, we consider a variation of the wiretap channel where the sender and legitimate receiver also have access to correlated source sequences. They use both the sources and the structure of the underlying channel to extract secret keys. We provide general upper and lower bounds on the secret key rate and establish the capacity for the reversely degraded case.by Ashish Khisti.Ph.D

    Extremal Combinatorics

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    Subject Index Volumes 1–200

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    Medium Access Control and Network Coding for Wireless Information Flows

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    This dissertation addresses the intertwined problems of medium access control (MAC) and network coding in ad hoc wireless networks. The emerging wireless network applications introduce new challenges that go beyond the classical understanding of wireline networks based on layered architecture and cooperation. Wireless networks involve strong interactions between MAC and network layers that need to be jointly specified in a cross-layer design framework with cooperative and non-cooperative users. For multi-hop wireless networks, we first rediscover the value of scheduled access at MAC layer through a detailed foray into the questions of throughput and energy consumption. We propose a distributed time-division mechanism to activate dynamic transmitter-receiver assignments and eliminate interference at non-intended receivers for throughput and energy-efficient resource allocation based on stable operation with arbitrary single-receiver MAC protocols. In addition to full cooperation, we consider competitive operation of selfish users with individual performance objectives of throughput, energy and delay. We follow a game-theoretic approach to evaluate the non-cooperative equilibrium strategies at MAC layer and discuss the coupling with physical layer through power and rate control. As a cross-layer extension to multi-hop operation, we analyze the non-cooperative operation of joint MAC and routing, and introduce cooperation stimulation mechanisms for packet forwarding. We also study the impact of malicious transmitters through a game formulation of denial of service attacks in random access and power-controlled MAC. As a new networking paradigm, network coding extends routing by allowing intermediate transmitters to code over the received packets. We introduce the adaptation of network coding to wireless environment in conjunction with MAC. We address new research problems that arise when network coding is cast in a cross-layer optimization framework with stable operation. We specify the maximum throughput and stability regions, and show the necessity of joint design of MAC and network coding for throughput and energy-efficient operation of cooperative or competitive users. Finally, we discuss the benefits of network coding for throughput stability in single-hop multicast communication over erasure channels. Deterministic and random coding schemes are introduced to optimize the stable throughput properties. The results extend our understanding of fundamental communication limits and trade-offs in wireless networks

    Optimization and Communication in UAV Networks

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    UAVs are becoming a reality and attract increasing attention. They can be remotely controlled or completely autonomous and be used alone or as a fleet and in a large set of applications. They are constrained by hardware since they cannot be too heavy and rely on batteries. Their use still raises a large set of exciting new challenges in terms of trajectory optimization and positioning when they are used alone or in cooperation, and communication when they evolve in swarm, to name but a few examples. This book presents some new original contributions regarding UAV or UAV swarm optimization and communication aspects

    XXI Workshop de Investigadores en Ciencias de la Computación - WICC 2019: libro de actas

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    Trabajos presentados en el XXI Workshop de Investigadores en Ciencias de la Computación (WICC), celebrado en la provincia de San Juan los días 25 y 26 de abril 2019, organizado por la Red de Universidades con Carreras en Informática (RedUNCI) y la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales de la Universidad Nacional de San Juan.Red de Universidades con Carreras en Informátic
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