22 research outputs found

    Software, Image and Audio Watermarking Algorithmic Techniques

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    Digital watermarking involves embedding a watermark value within a digital object, such as image, audio, video, text and software, to prove authenticity in case of intellectual property infringement. Headed to this direction, in this paper we survey our previous algorithmic techniques for software and image watermarking and present a new developing idea based on them for audio watermarking. Our watermarking techniques take as an input a watermark that is an integer ww which can be efficiently encoded as a self-inverting permutation pi∗pi^*. We demonstrate multiple representations of self-inverting permutations, namely reducible permutation graphs, two-dimensional and one-dimensional matrices. We propose efficient algorithmic techniques for watermarking software, image and audio that exploit self-inverting permutation representations in order to embed the watermark ww by making imperceptible modifications and producing equivalent watermarked objects of high fidelity

    Digital watermarking methods for data security and authentication

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    Philosophiae Doctor - PhDCryptology is the study of systems that typically originate from a consideration of the ideal circumstances under which secure information exchange is to take place. It involves the study of cryptographic and other processes that might be introduced for breaking the output of such systems - cryptanalysis. This includes the introduction of formal mathematical methods for the design of a cryptosystem and for estimating its theoretical level of securit

    Engineering Education and Research Using MATLAB

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    MATLAB is a software package used primarily in the field of engineering for signal processing, numerical data analysis, modeling, programming, simulation, and computer graphic visualization. In the last few years, it has become widely accepted as an efficient tool, and, therefore, its use has significantly increased in scientific communities and academic institutions. This book consists of 20 chapters presenting research works using MATLAB tools. Chapters include techniques for programming and developing Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs), dynamic systems, electric machines, signal and image processing, power electronics, mixed signal circuits, genetic programming, digital watermarking, control systems, time-series regression modeling, and artificial neural networks

    Digital Image Processing

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    Newspapers and the popular scientific press today publish many examples of highly impressive images. These images range, for example, from those showing regions of star birth in the distant Universe to the extent of the stratospheric ozone depletion over Antarctica in springtime, and to those regions of the human brain affected by Alzheimer’s disease. Processed digitally to generate spectacular images, often in false colour, they all make an immediate and deep impact on the viewer’s imagination and understanding. Professor Jonathan Blackledge’s erudite but very useful new treatise Digital Image Processing: Mathematical and Computational Methods explains both the underlying theory and the techniques used to produce such images in considerable detail. It also provides many valuable example problems - and their solutions - so that the reader can test his/her grasp of the physical, mathematical and numerical aspects of the particular topics and methods discussed. As such, this magnum opus complements the author’s earlier work Digital Signal Processing. Both books are a wonderful resource for students who wish to make their careers in this fascinating and rapidly developing field which has an ever increasing number of areas of application. The strengths of this large book lie in: • excellent explanatory introduction to the subject; • thorough treatment of the theoretical foundations, dealing with both electromagnetic and acoustic wave scattering and allied techniques; • comprehensive discussion of all the basic principles, the mathematical transforms (e.g. the Fourier and Radon transforms), their interrelationships and, in particular, Born scattering theory and its application to imaging systems modelling; discussion in detail - including the assumptions and limitations - of optical imaging, seismic imaging, medical imaging (using ultrasound), X-ray computer aided tomography, tomography when the wavelength of the probing radiation is of the same order as the dimensions of the scatterer, Synthetic Aperture Radar (airborne or spaceborne), digital watermarking and holography; detail devoted to the methods of implementation of the analytical schemes in various case studies and also as numerical packages (especially in C/C++); • coverage of deconvolution, de-blurring (or sharpening) an image, maximum entropy techniques, Bayesian estimators, techniques for enhancing the dynamic range of an image, methods of filtering images and techniques for noise reduction; • discussion of thresholding, techniques for detecting edges in an image and for contrast stretching, stochastic scattering (random walk models) and models for characterizing an image statistically; • investigation of fractal images, fractal dimension segmentation, image texture, the coding and storing of large quantities of data, and image compression such as JPEG; • valuable summary of the important results obtained in each Chapter given at its end; • suggestions for further reading at the end of each Chapter. I warmly commend this text to all readers, and trust that they will find it to be invaluable. Professor Michael J Rycroft Visiting Professor at the International Space University, Strasbourg, France, and at Cranfield University, England

    Quaternion Matrices : Statistical Properties and Applications to Signal Processing and Wavelets

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    Similarly to how complex numbers provide a possible framework for extending scalar signal processing techniques to 2-channel signals, the 4-dimensional hypercomplex algebra of quaternions can be used to represent signals with 3 or 4 components. For a quaternion random vector to be suited for quaternion linear processing, it must be (second-order) proper. We consider the likelihood ratio test (LRT) for propriety, and compute the exact distribution for statistics of Box type, which include this LRT. Various approximate distributions are compared. The Wishart distribution of a quaternion sample covariance matrix is derived from first principles. Quaternions are isomorphic to an algebra of structured 4x4 real matrices. This mapping is our main tool, and suggests considering more general real matrix problems as a way of investigating quaternion linear algorithms. A quaternion vector autoregressive (VAR) time-series model is equivalent to a structured real VAR model. We show that generalised least squares (and Gaussian maximum likelihood) estimation of the parameters reduces to ordinary least squares, but only if the innovations are proper. A LRT is suggested to simultaneously test for quaternion structure in the regression coefficients and innovation covariance. Matrix-valued wavelets (MVWs) are generalised (multi)wavelets for vector-valued signals. Quaternion wavelets are equivalent to structured MVWs. Taking into account orthogonal similarity, all MVWs can be constructed from non-trivial MVWs. We show that there are no non-scalar non-trivial MVWs with short support [0,3]. Through symbolic computation we construct the families of shortest non-trivial 2x2 Daubechies MVWs and quaternion Daubechies wavelets.Open Acces
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