493 research outputs found

    On the Black-Box Separation Between Ring Signatures and Public Key Encryptions

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    In this paper, we show that it is impossible to construct a public key encryption scheme (PKE) from a ring signature scheme in a black-box fashion in the standard model. Such an impossibility is highly non-trivial because, to the best of our knowledge, known generic constructions of ring signature scheme are based on public key cryptosystems or in the random oracle model. Technically, we introduce a new cryptographic primitive named indistinguishable multi-designated verifiers signature (IMDVS), and prove that (i) IMDVS is equivalent to PKE, and (ii) it is impossible to construct IMDVS from a ring signature scheme in a generic way. Our result suggests an essential gap between ring signature and group signature, as it is known that group signature implies PKE

    On the Black-Box Impossibility of Multi-Designated Verifiers Signature Schemes from Ring Signature Schemes

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    From the work by Laguillaumie and Vergnaud in ICICS\u2704, it has been widely believed that multi-designated verifier signature schemes (MDVS) can be constructed from ring signature schemes in general. However in this paper, somewhat surprisingly, we prove that it is impossible to construct an MDVS scheme from a ring signature scheme in a black-box sense (in the standard model). The impossibility stems from the difference between the definitions of unforgeability. To the best of our knowledge, existing works demonstrating the constructions do not provide formal reduction from an MDVS scheme to a ring signature scheme, and thus the impossibility has been overlooked for a long time

    Hydrophobic Silicone Elastomer Chamber for Recording Trajectories of Motile Porcine Sperms without Adsorption

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    Motile porcine sperms adhere to hydrophilic materials such as glass and plastics. The adsorption of sperms to a hydrophobic poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) membrane is less compared with that to glass. We investigated the linear velocity (LV) and amplitude of lateral head displacement (ALHD) of motile porcine sperm on glass and PDMS preparations using computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA). Significant decreases were observed in the 15-min LV (P<0.05) and ALHD (P<0.05) in motile porcine sperm on glass preparations compared with those on PDMS preparations. These differences were due to adsorption of the head and/or neck to hydrophilic substrates. Because of the elasticity of PDMS, we propose that a PDMS membrane should be used for CASA. To investigate the dynamics of motile porcine sperms with microfluidics, we do not recommend plasma treatment to bond PDMS and glass in the microchannel preparation; instead, we suggest that a PDMS molding process without plasma treatment be used for preparation of microfluidic channels

    Environmental sound synthesis from vocal imitations and sound event labels

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    One way of expressing an environmental sound is using vocal imitations, which involve the process of replicating or mimicking the rhythm and pitch of sounds by voice. We can effectively express the features of environmental sounds, such as rhythm and pitch, using vocal imitations, which cannot be expressed by conventional input information, such as sound event labels, images, or texts, in an environmental sound synthesis model. In this paper, we propose a framework for environmental sound synthesis from vocal imitations and sound event labels based on a framework of a vector quantized encoder and the Tacotron2 decoder. Using vocal imitations is expected to control the pitch and rhythm of the synthesized sound, which only sound event labels cannot control. Our objective and subjective experimental results show that vocal imitations effectively control the pitch and rhythm of synthesized sounds.Comment: Submitted to ICASSP202

    Onoma-to-wave: Environmental sound synthesis from onomatopoeic words

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    In this paper, we propose a framework for environmental sound synthesis from onomatopoeic words. As one way of expressing an environmental sound, we can use an onomatopoeic word, which is a character sequence for phonetically imitating a sound. An onomatopoeic word is effective for describing diverse sound features. Therefore, using onomatopoeic words for environmental sound synthesis will enable us to generate diverse environmental sounds. To generate diverse sounds, we propose a method based on a sequence-to-sequence framework for synthesizing environmental sounds from onomatopoeic words. We also propose a method of environmental sound synthesis using onomatopoeic words and sound event labels. The use of sound event labels in addition to onomatopoeic words enables us to capture each sound event's feature depending on the input sound event label. Our subjective experiments show that our proposed methods achieve higher diversity and naturalness than conventional methods using sound event labels

    Ameliorative effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids against palmitic acid-induced insulin resistance in L6 skeletal muscle cells

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Fatty acid-induced insulin resistance and impaired glucose uptake activity in muscle cells are fundamental events in the development of type 2 diabetes and hyperglycemia. There is an increasing demand for compounds including drugs and functional foods that can prevent myocellular insulin resistance.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In this study, we established a high-throughput assay to screen for compounds that can improve myocellular insulin resistance, which was based on a previously reported non-radioisotope 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) uptake assay. Insulin-resistant muscle cells were prepared by treating rat L6 skeletal muscle cells with 750 μM palmitic acid for 14 h. Using the established assay, the impacts of several fatty acids on myocellular insulin resistance were determined.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In normal L6 cells, treatment with saturated palmitic or stearic acid alone decreased 2DG uptake, whereas unsaturated fatty acids did not. Moreover, co-treatment with oleic acid canceled the palmitic acid-induced decrease in 2DG uptake activity. Using the developed assay with palmitic acid-induced insulin-resistant L6 cells, we determined the effects of other unsaturated fatty acids. We found that arachidonic, eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids improved palmitic acid-decreased 2DG uptake at lower concentrations than the other unsaturated fatty acids, including oleic acid, as 10 μM arachidonic acid showed similar effects to 750 μM oleic acid.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We have found that polyunsaturated fatty acids, in particular arachidonic and eicosapentaenoic acids prevent palmitic acid-induced myocellular insulin resistance.</p

    Assessment of inhibition with the Go/No-Go Task

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    Young, Sutherland, and McCoy indicated that a Go/No-Go Task (GNG) becomes more difficult as the inter-stimulus intervals (ISIs) becomes shorter. However, is the number of commission errors under extremely short ISIs a useful metric for assessing response inhibition? This study challenges the assumption that a shorter ISI in the GNG enables better assessment of response inhibition. University students (N = 213) completed the GNG, the Conners Continuous Performance Test 3rd Edition (CCPT), and the Modified Stroop Task. The GNG comprised four blocks of 400, 600, 800, and 1000 ms ISIs, whereas the stimulus presentation was fixed at 250 ms. Consistent with Young et al., shorter ISIs in the GNG resulted in more commission errors. In the block with the shortest ISI, participants also failed more frequently in responses in go trials than in the other blocks, which appears to increase in error variance of commission errors. Consistent with this interpretation, the association between the number of commission errors in the block with 400 ms ISI and CCPT performance was weaker than those between the number of commission errors in other blocks and CCPT performance. It is concluded that using the number of commission errors in the condition with extremely short ISIs in the GNG might be inappropriate for assessing response inhibition
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