912 research outputs found
Entropy in Image Analysis III
Image analysis can be applied to rich and assorted scenarios; therefore, the aim of this recent research field is not only to mimic the human vision system. Image analysis is the main methods that computers are using today, and there is body of knowledge that they will be able to manage in a totally unsupervised manner in future, thanks to their artificial intelligence. The articles published in the book clearly show such a future
Cryptography and Its Applications in Information Security
Nowadays, mankind is living in a cyber world. Modern technologies involve fast communication links between potentially billions of devices through complex networks (satellite, mobile phone, Internet, Internet of Things (IoT), etc.). The main concern posed by these entangled complex networks is their protection against passive and active attacks that could compromise public security (sabotage, espionage, cyber-terrorism) and privacy. This Special Issue “Cryptography and Its Applications in Information Security” addresses the range of problems related to the security of information in networks and multimedia communications and to bring together researchers, practitioners, and industrials interested by such questions. It consists of eight peer-reviewed papers, however easily understandable, that cover a range of subjects and applications related security of information
Entropy in Image Analysis II
Image analysis is a fundamental task for any application where extracting information from images is required. The analysis requires highly sophisticated numerical and analytical methods, particularly for those applications in medicine, security, and other fields where the results of the processing consist of data of vital importance. This fact is evident from all the articles composing the Special Issue "Entropy in Image Analysis II", in which the authors used widely tested methods to verify their results. In the process of reading the present volume, the reader will appreciate the richness of their methods and applications, in particular for medical imaging and image security, and a remarkable cross-fertilization among the proposed research areas
Multimedia
The nowadays ubiquitous and effortless digital data capture and processing capabilities offered by the majority of devices, lead to an unprecedented penetration of multimedia content in our everyday life. To make the most of this phenomenon, the rapidly increasing volume and usage of digitised content requires constant re-evaluation and adaptation of multimedia methodologies, in order to meet the relentless change of requirements from both the user and system perspectives. Advances in Multimedia provides readers with an overview of the ever-growing field of multimedia by bringing together various research studies and surveys from different subfields that point out such important aspects. Some of the main topics that this book deals with include: multimedia management in peer-to-peer structures & wireless networks, security characteristics in multimedia, semantic gap bridging for multimedia content and novel multimedia applications
Entropy in Dynamic Systems
In order to measure and quantify the complex behavior of real-world systems, either novel mathematical approaches or modifications of classical ones are required to precisely predict, monitor, and control complicated chaotic and stochastic processes. Though the term of entropy comes from Greek and emphasizes its analogy to energy, today, it has wandered to different branches of pure and applied sciences and is understood in a rather rough way, with emphasis placed on the transition from regular to chaotic states, stochastic and deterministic disorder, and uniform and non-uniform distribution or decay of diversity. This collection of papers addresses the notion of entropy in a very broad sense. The presented manuscripts follow from different branches of mathematical/physical sciences, natural/social sciences, and engineering-oriented sciences with emphasis placed on the complexity of dynamical systems. Topics like timing chaos and spatiotemporal chaos, bifurcation, synchronization and anti-synchronization, stability, lumped mass and continuous mechanical systems modeling, novel nonlinear phenomena, and resonances are discussed
Adopt an optimal location using a genetic algorithm for audio steganography
With the development of technologies, most of the users utilizing the Internet for transmitting information from one place to another place. The transmitted data may be affected because of the intermediate user. Therefore, the steganography approach is applied for managing the secret information. Here audio steganography is utilized to maintain the secret information by hiding the image into the audio files. In this work, discrete cosine transforms, and discrete wavelet transform is applied to perform the Steganalysis process. The optimal hiding location has been identified by using the optimization technique called a genetic algorithm. The method utilizes the selection, crossover and mutation operators for selecting the best location. The chosen locations are difficult to predict by unauthorized users because the embedded location is varied from information to information. Then the efficiency of the system ensures the high PSNR, structural similarity index (SSIM), minimum mean square error value and Jaccard, which is evaluated on the audio Steganalysis dataset
An efficient chaos-based image encryption technique using bitplane decay and genetic operators
Social networks have greatly expanded in the last ten years the need for sharing multimedia data. However, on open networks such as the Internet, where security is frequently compromised, it is simple for eavesdroppers to approach the actual contents without much difficulty. Researchers have created a variety of encryption methods to strengthen the security of this transmission and make it difficult for eavesdroppers to get genuine data. However, these conventional approaches increase computing costs and communication overhead and do not offer protection against fresh threats. The problems with current algorithms encourage academics to further investigate the subject and suggest new algorithms that are more effective than current methods, that reduce overhead, and which are equipped with features needed by next-generation multimedia networks. In this paper, a genetic operator-based encryption method for multimedia security is proposed. It has been noted that the proposed algorithm produces improved key strength results. The investigations using attacks on data loss, differential assaults, statistical attacks, and brute force attacks show that the encryption technique suggested has improved security performance. It focuses on two techniques, bitplane slicing and followed by block segmentation and scrambling. The suggested method first divides the plaintext picture into several blocks, which is then followed by block swapping done by the genetic operator used to combine the genetic information of two different images to generate new offspring. The key stream is produced from an iterative chaotic map with infinite collapse (ICMIC). Based on a close-loop modulation coupling (CMC) approach, a three-dimensional hyperchaotic ICMIC modulation map is proposed. By using a hybrid model of multidirectional circular permutation with this map, a brand-new colour image encryption algorithm is created. In this approach, a multidirectional circular permutation is used to disrupt the image's pixel placements, and genetic operations are used to replace the pixel values. According to simulation findings and security research, the technique can fend off brute-force, statistical, differential, known-plaintext, and chosen-plaintext assaults, and has a strong key sensitivity.Web of Science2220art. no. 804
Machine Learning in Sensors and Imaging
Machine learning is extending its applications in various fields, such as image processing, the Internet of Things, user interface, big data, manufacturing, management, etc. As data are required to build machine learning networks, sensors are one of the most important technologies. In addition, machine learning networks can contribute to the improvement in sensor performance and the creation of new sensor applications. This Special Issue addresses all types of machine learning applications related to sensors and imaging. It covers computer vision-based control, activity recognition, fuzzy label classification, failure classification, motor temperature estimation, the camera calibration of intelligent vehicles, error detection, color prior model, compressive sensing, wildfire risk assessment, shelf auditing, forest-growing stem volume estimation, road management, image denoising, and touchscreens
Deterministic Chaos in Digital Cryptography
This thesis studies the application of deterministic chaos to digital
cryptography. Cryptographic systems such as pseudo-random generators
(PRNG), block ciphers and hash functions are regarded as a dynamic
system (X, j), where X is a state space (Le. message space)
and f : X -+ X is an iterated function. In both chaos theory and
cryptography, the object of study is a dynamic system that performs
an iterative nonlinear transformation of information in an apparently
unpredictable but deterministic manner. In terms of chaos theory, the
sensitivity to the initial conditions together with the mixing property
ensures cryptographic confusion (statistical independence) and diffusion
(uniform propagation of plaintext and key randomness into cihertext).
This synergetic relationship between the properties of chaotic and
cryptographic systems is considered at both the theoretical and practical
levels: The theoretical background upon which this relationship is
based, includes discussions on chaos, ergodicity, complexity, randomness,
unpredictability and entropy.
Two approaches to the finite-state implementation of chaotic systems
(Le. pseudo-chaos) are considered: (i) floating-point approximation of
continuous-state chaos; (ii) binary pseudo-chaos. An overview is given
of chaotic systems underpinning cryptographic algorithms along with
their strengths and weaknesses. Though all conventional cryposystems
are considered binary pseudo-chaos, neither chaos, nor pseudo-chaos are
sufficient to guarantee cryptographic strength and security.
A dynamic system is said to have an analytical solution Xn = (xo)
if any trajectory point Xn can be computed directly from the initial
conditions Xo, without performing n iterations. A chaotic system with an
analytical solution may have a unpredictable multi-valued map Xn+l =
f(xn). Their floating-point approximation is studied in the context of
pseudo-random generators.
A cryptographic software system E-Larm ™ implementing a multistream
pseudo-chaotic generator is described. Several pseudo-chaotic
systems including the logistic map, sine map, tangent- and logarithm feedback
maps, sawteeth and tent maps are evaluated by means of floating point
computations. Two types of partitioning are used to extract
pseudo-random from the floating-point state variable: (i) combining the
last significant bits of the floating-point number (for nonlinear maps);
and (ii) threshold partitioning (for piecewise linear maps). Multi-round
iterations are produced to decrease the bit dependence and increase non-linearity.
Relationships between pseudo-chaotic systems are introduced
to avoid short cycles (each system influences periodically the states of
other systems used in the encryption session).
An evaluation of cryptographic properties of E-Larm is given using
graphical plots such as state distributions, phase-space portraits, spectral
density Fourier transform, approximated entropy (APEN), cycle length
histogram, as well as a variety of statistical tests from the National Institute
of Standards and Technology (NIST) suite. Though E-Larm passes
all tests recommended by NIST, an approach based on the floating-point
approximation of chaos is inefficient in terms of the quality/performance
ratio (compared with existing PRNG algorithms). Also no solution is
known to control short cycles.
In conclusion, the role of chaos theory in cryptography is identified;
disadvantages of floating-point pseudo-chaos are emphasized although
binary pseudo-chaos is considered useful for cryptographic applications.Durand Technology Limite
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