188 research outputs found

    A Formal Treatment of Envelope Encryption

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    Envelope encryption is a method to encrypt data with two distinct keys in its basic form. Data is first encrypted with a data-encryption key, and then the data-encryption key is encrypted with a key-encryption key. Despite its deployment in major cloud services, as far as we know, envelope encryption has not received any formal treatment. To address this issue, we first formalize the syntax and security requirements of envelope encryption in the symmetric-key setting. Then, we show that it can be constructed by combining encryptment and authenticated encryption with associated data (AEAD). Encryptment is one-time AEAD satisfying that a small part of a ciphertext works as a commitment to the corresponding secret key, message, and associated data. Finally, we show that the security of the generic construction is reduced to the security of the underlying encryptment and AEAD

    Compactly Committing Authenticated Encryption Using Encryptment and Tweakable Block Cipher

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    Facebook introduced message franking to enable users to report abusive content verifiably in end-to-end encrypted messaging. Grubbs et al. formalized the underlying primitive called compactly committing authenticated encryption with associated data (ccAEAD) and presented schemes with provable security. Dodis et al. proposed a core building block called encryptment and presented a generic construction of ccAEAD with encryptment and standard AEAD. This paper first proposes to use a tweakable block cipher instead of AEAD for the generic construction of Dodis et al. In the security analysis of the proposed construction, its ciphertext integrity is shown to require a new but feasible assumption on the ciphertext integrity of encryptment. Then, this paper formalizes remotely keyed ccAEAD (RK ccAEAD) and shows that the proposed construction works as RK ccAEAD. Finally, the confidentiality of the proposed construction as RK ccAEAD is shown to require a new variant of confidentiality for encryptment. The problem of remotely keyed encryption was posed by Blaze in 1996. It is now related to the problem of designing a cryptographic scheme using a trusted module and/or with leakage resiliency

    Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: A perceptual illusion?

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    International audienceWe report a set of experiments demonstrating that the number of phonemes perceived in a stimulus depends on the native language of the listener. Comparing French and Japanese subjects we found that the phonotactic properties of the native language can induce subjects to insert "illusory" segments. In Experiment 1, we varied the duration of an inter-consonantal vowel [u] in stimuli such as ebuzo and found that unlike the French, Japanese listeners report that the vowel [u] is present even in stimuli in which the vowel is absent. In Experiment 2 and 3 using an ABX task, we show that Japanese subjects have trouble discriminating stimuli that contain an [u] vowel from stimuli in which the vowel is absent, e.g., (ebuzo vs. ebzo). However, they can easily discriminate items that contain one versus two [u] vowels, e.g., ebuzo vs. ebuuzo, a distinctive contrast in Japanese. Results for French subjects are reversed

    One-dimensional array of small tunnel junctions fabricated using 30-nm-diameter gold nanoparticles placed in a 140-nm-wide resist groove

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    We present percolative arrays of gold nanoparticles (NPs) formed in a resist groove. To enhance the con nection probability, the width of the resist groove (140 nm) was designed to be approximately five times larger than the diameter of gold NPs (30 nm). Two-stage deposition of gold NPs was employed to form bridge connections between the source and drain electrodes. Dithiol molecules coated on surfaces of gold NPs worked as tunnel barriers. 5 of 12 samples exhibited Coulomb blockade characteristics, in one of which the gate response was confirmed

    Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: A perceptual illusion?

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    Energy allocation trade-offs as a function of age in fungiid corals

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    To compete effectively, living organisms must adjust the allocation of available energy resources for growth, survival, maintenance, and reproduction throughout their life histories. Energy demands and allocations change throughout the life history of an organism, and understanding their energy allocation strategies requires determination of the relative age of individuals. As most scleractinian corals are colonial, the relationship between age and mass/size is complicated by colony fragmentation, partial mortality, and asexual reproduction. To overcome these limitations, solitary mushroom corals, Herpolitha limax from Okinawa, Japan and Fungia fungites from Okinawa and the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia, were used to investigate how energy allocation between these fundamental processes varies as a function of age. Measurements of the relative growth, biochemical profiles, fecundity of individuals of different sizes, and the settlement success of their progeny have revealed physiological trade-offs between growth and reproduction, with increasing body mass ultimately leading to senescence. The importance of energy allocation for reproduction led us to examine the reproductive strategies and sex allocation in the two studied species. In the present study, the smallest individuals of both species studied were found to invest most of their energy in relative growth, showing higher lipid and carbohydrate content than the later stages. In medium-sized corals, this pattern was overturned in favour of reproduction, manifesting in terms of both the highest fecundity and settlement success of the resulting brooded larvae. Finally, a phase of apparent senescence was observed in the largest individuals, characterized by a decrease in most of the parameters measured. In addition, complex reproductive plasticity has been revealed in F. fungites in the GBR, with individual females releasing eggs, embryos, planulae, or a combination of these. These data provide the most direct estimates currently available for physiological, age-related trade-offs during the life history of a coral. The unusual reproductive characteristics of the GBR F. fungites indicate previously unknown layers of complexity in the reproductive biology of corals and have implications for their adaptive potential across a wide geographical scale

    Pediatric moyamoya disease presenting with intracerebral hemorrhage--report of three cases and review of the literature.

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    Intracerebral hemorrhage in patients with moyamoya disease is rare in children. We report three unique cases of pediatric moyamoya disease with hemorrhagic onset. Two 7-year-old girls and a 9-year-old girl were admitted to our hospital because of intracerebral hemorrhage associated with angiographically verified moyamoya disease. Two of them did not demonstrate either an ischemic episode or cerebral infarct on the magnetic resonance images. A decreased regional cerebral blood flow was revealed on single photon emission computed tomography in two patients, who developed cerebral infarction in the acute stage following hemorrhage. They underwent superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery anastomoses combined with encephalo-myo-synangiosis, and have not experienced any further ischemic episodes thereafter. Hemodynamic insufficiency associated with moyamoya disease could cause intracerebral hemorrhage even in children. Adequate management in the acute stage of hemorrhage and revascularization surgery are recommended to prevent cerebral infarction, which may easily occur in pediatric patients with moyamoya disease

    A simplified PCR assay for fast and easy mycoplasma mastitis screening in dairy cattle

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    A simplified polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was developed for fast and easy screening of mycoplasma mastitis in dairy cattle. Species of major mycoplasma strains [Mycoplasma (M.) bovis, M. arginini, M. bovigenitalium, M. californicum, M. bovirhinis, M. alkalescens and M. canadense] in cultured milk samples were detected by this simplified PCR-based method as well as a standard PCR technique. The minimum concentration limit for detecting mycoplasma by the simplified PCR was estimated to be about 2.5 × 103 cfu/mL and was similar to that of the standard PCR. We compared the specificity and sensitivity of the simplified PCR to those of a culture method. Out of 1,685 milk samples cultured in mycoplasma broth, the simplified PCR detected Mycoplasma DNA in 152 that were also positive according to the culture assay. The sensitivity and specificity of the simplified PCR were 98.7% and 99.7%, respectively, for detecting mycoplasma in those cultures. The results obtained by the simplified PCR were consistent with ones from standard PCR. This newly developed simplified PCR, which does not require DNA purification, can analyze about 300 cultured samples within 3 h. The results from our study suggest that the simplified PCR can be used for mycoplasma mastitis screening in large-scale dairy farms

    Evaluation of the inter-particle distance of gold nanoparticles dispersed on silane-treated substrates to fabricate dithiol-connected arrays

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    Small tunnel junctions using gold nanoparticles (GNPs) as electrodes have been studied to fabricate single-electron devices. GNPs connected via dithiol molecules have been used as small tunnel junctions, and a two-stage dispersion method was used to fabricate dithiol-connected GNP arrays. In this process, the GNPs were fixed on silane-treated substrates by immersing the substrate in a colloidal gold solution. For fabricating dithiol-connected arrays, the inter-particle distance of the dispersed GNPs must be smaller than the GNP diameter. Consequently, the inter-particle distance controlled by the immersion time (T IM1) was evaluated. For T IM1 values exceeding 8 h, the inter-particle distance was less than the GNP diameter. A second dispersion of GNPs after treating samples with dithiol realized particle connections. For the GNP arrays produced with T IM1 values greater than 8 h, the I–V characteristics were measured at 77 K, and the yield of devices exhibiting nonlinear I–V curves was 23%
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