DocumentCode
1784679
Title
Wire-tap channel concept in nature and society
Author
Korzhik, Valery ; Yakovlev, Victor ; Morales-Luna, Guilermo
Author_Institution
Dept. of Inf. Security of Telecommun. Syst., State Univ. of Telecommun., St. Petersburg, Russia
fYear
2014
fDate
7-9 July 2014
Firstpage
231
Lastpage
236
Abstract
The notion of abstract wire-tap channel concept (WTCC) has been proposed by A. Wyner in 1975 and it was later developed by many researchers. This concept executes special randomized encoding in order to prevent information leaking over the wire-tap channel while maintaining a reliable information transmission over the main channel. The difference between the wire-tap and the main channel is in a different level of noises in these channels or an existing of feedback channel as a part of the main channel. We present a short review regarding the main results of WTCC and its applications in communication engineering. But the goal of this paper is to “go back to nature and society” and to try to find some examples of this concept presence in nature and society. We show that among such examples it is possible to count the camouflage in the animal kingdom, the genetic code, and natural languages. We are unable to present rigorous total proofs of the WTCC presence in the mentioned phenomena, but we hope to motivate the IT community to find some new examples of such presence in both nature and society.
Keywords
encoding; telecommunication channels; WTCC; WTCC presence; abstract wire-tap channel concept; animal kingdom; feedback channel; genetic code; information leaking; natural languages; special randomized encoding; Encoding; Genetics; Information processing; Law; Noise; Redundancy; Wire-tap channel; camouflage in animal kingdom; genetic code; modern painting; natural languages;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information, Intelligence, Systems and Applications, IISA 2014, The 5th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Chania
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IISA.2014.6878717
Filename
6878717
Link To Document