146 research outputs found
End-to-end verifiable voting for developing countries - what’s hard in Lausanne is harder still in Lahore
In recent years end-to-end verifiable voting (E2EVV) has emerged as a
promising new paradigm to conduct evidence-based elections. However, E2EVV
systems thus far have primarily been designed for the developed world and the
fundamental assumptions underlying the design of these systems do not readily
translate to the developing world, and may even act as potential barriers to
adoption of these systems. This is unfortunate because developing countries
account for 80\% of the global population, and given their economic and
socio-political dilemmas and their track record of contentious elections, these
countries arguably stand to benefit most from this exciting new paradigm. In
this paper, we highlight various limitations and challenges in adapting E2EVV
systems to these environments, broadly classed across social, political,
technical, operational, and human dimensions. We articulate corresponding
research questions and identify significant literature gaps in these
categories. We also suggest relevant strategies to aid researchers,
practitioners, and policymakers in visualizing and exploring solutions that
align with the context and unique ground realities in these environments. Our
goal is to outline a broader research agenda for the community to successfully
adapt E2EVV voting systems to developing countries
End-to-end verifiable voting for developing countries -- what's hard in Lausanne is harder still in Lahore
In recent years end-to-end verifiable voting (E2EVV) has emerged as a
promising new paradigm to conduct evidence-based elections. However, E2EVV
systems thus far have primarily been designed for the developed world and the
fundamental assumptions underlying the design of these systems do not readily
translate to the developing world, and may even act as potential barriers to
adoption of these systems. This is unfortunate because developing countries
account for 80\% of the global population, and given their economic and
socio-political dilemmas and their track record of contentious elections, these
countries arguably stand to benefit most from this exciting new paradigm. In
this paper, we highlight various limitations and challenges in adapting E2EVV
systems to these environments, broadly classed across social, political,
technical, operational, and human dimensions. We articulate corresponding
research questions and identify significant literature gaps in these
categories. We also suggest relevant strategies to aid researchers,
practitioners, and policymakers in visualizing and exploring solutions that
align with the context and unique ground realities in these environments. Our
goal is to outline a broader research agenda for the community to successfully
adapt E2EVV voting systems to developing countries
Meconium stained liquor and its neonatal outcome
Objective: To determine the maternal factors and neonatal outcome of pregnancy complicated by meconium stained amniotic fluid. Methods: This one year retrospective study was conducted at the Agha Khan Hospital for Women-Garden Campus, it is a secondary care private teaching hospital. Demographics information included gestational age, gender and birth weight of baby, medical and obstetric complications during pregnancy, mode of delivery, neonatal outcome (Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS) and need for admission in nursery) were recorded on a pre-designed proforma. Results: In our study the frequency of meconium stained amniotic fluid (MSAF) was 7.85%, out of them 12 % babies developed MAS. There was significant association between grades of meconium and MAS, babies with thick meconium were prone to develop MAS (P = 0.02). Emergency cesarean section was significantly associated with MAS. Gestational diabetes (GDM) and pregnancy induced hypertension (PIH) were the significant factors associated with MAS. Conclusion: Thick Meconium stained amniotic fluid was associated with low APGAR score, high rate of emergency cesarean section and meconium aspiration syndrome. Anemia during pregnancy, PIH and GDM were important risk factor associated with MAS
Secret Key Generation Rate vs. Reconciliation Cost Using Wireless Channel Characteristics in Body Area Networks
Abstract—In this paper, we investigate the feasibility of real-time derivation of cryptographic keys in body area networks using unique characteristics of the underlying wireless channel. We perform experiments to confirm that motion does indeed provide significant highly correlated randomness on either end of the wireless link between basestation and mobile mote to enable real-time key generation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that channel characteristics for a dynamic body area network consist of two different components, a fast and a slow component, each of which make a qualitatively different contribution to key generation. These components can be isolated to address specific needs of the application scenario: the fast component can yield high entropy keys at a fast rate between basestation and mobile mote with some bit disagreement between the two devices; the slow component generates keys at a lower rate but with very high level of bit agreement. Our experimental results highlight this tradeoff, and our key generation protocol details the key extraction process. I
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