Title :
Making the most of two heuristics: breaking transposition ciphers with ants
Author :
Russell, Matthew D. ; Clark, John A. ; Stepney, Susan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., York Univ., UK
Abstract :
Multiple anagramming is a general method for the cryptanalysis of transposition ciphers, and has a graph theoretic representation. Inspired by a partially mechanised approach used in World War II, we consider the possibility of a fully automated attack. Two heuristics based on measures of natural language are used - one to recognise plaintext, and another to guide construction of the secret key. This is shown to be unworkable for cryptograms of a certain difficulty due to random variation in the constructive heuristic. A solver based on an ant colony optimisation (AGO) algorithm is then introduced, increasing the range of cryptograms that can be treated; the pheromone feedback provides a mechanism for the recognition heuristic to correct the noisy constructive heuristic.
Keywords :
genetic algorithms; graph theory; natural languages; public key cryptography; ant colony optimization algorithm; cryptanalysis; cryptograms; graph theoretic representation; multiple anagramming; natural language; plaintext; secret key; transposition cipher breaking; Ant colony optimization; Colored noise; Computer science; Cryptography; Error correction; Feedback; Frequency; Geographic Information Systems; History; Natural languages;
Conference_Titel :
Evolutionary Computation, 2003. CEC '03. The 2003 Congress on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7804-0
DOI :
10.1109/CEC.2003.1299423