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Secret sharing schemes form one of the most important topic in
Cryptography. These protocols are used in many areas, applied
mathematics, computer science, electrical engineering. A secret is
divided into several pieces called shares. Each share is given to a
user of the system. Each user has no information about the secret,
but the secret can be retrieved by certain authorized coalition of
users.This book is devoted to such schemes inspired by Coding
Theory. The classical schemes of Shamir, Blakley, Massey are
recalled. Survey is made of research in Combinatorial Coding Theory
they triggered, mostly self-dual codes, and minimal codes.
Applications to engineering like image processing, and key
management of MANETs are highlighted.
Most coding theory experts date the origin of the subject with the
1948 publication of A Mathematical Theory of Communication by
Claude Shannon. Since then, coding theory has grown into a
discipline with many practical applications (antennas, networks,
memories), requiring various mathematical techniques, from
commutative algebra, to semi-definite programming, to algebraic
geometry. Most topics covered in the Concise Encyclopedia of Coding
Theory are presented in short sections at an introductory level and
progress from basic to advanced level, with definitions, examples,
and many references. The book is divided into three parts: Part I
fundamentals: cyclic codes, skew cyclic codes, quasi-cyclic codes,
self-dual codes, codes and designs, codes over rings, convolutional
codes, performance bounds Part II families: AG codes, group algebra
codes, few-weight codes, Boolean function codes, codes over graphs
Part III applications: alternative metrics, algorithmic techniques,
interpolation decoding, pseudo-random sequences, lattices, quantum
coding, space-time codes, network coding, distributed storage,
secret-sharing, and code-based-cryptography. Features Suitable for
students and researchers in a wide range of mathematical
disciplines Contains many examples and references Most topics take
the reader to the frontiers of research
Codes and Rings: Theory and Practice is a systematic review of
literature that focuses on codes over rings and rings acting on
codes. Since the breakthrough works on quaternary codes in the
1990s, two decades of research have moved the field far beyond its
original periphery. This book fills this gap by consolidating
results scattered in the literature, addressing classical as well
as applied aspects of rings and coding theory. New research covered
by the book encompasses skew cyclic codes, decomposition theory of
quasi-cyclic codes and related codes and duality over Frobenius
rings. Primarily suitable for ring theorists at PhD level engaged
in application research and coding theorists interested in
algebraic foundations, the work is also valuable to computational
scientists and working cryptologists in the area.
There are connections between invariant theory and modular forms
since the times of Felix Klein, in the 19th century, connections
between codes and lattices since the 1960's. The aim of the book is
to explore the interplay between codes and modular forms. Here
modular form is understood in a wide sense (Jacobi forms, Siegel
forms, Hilbert forms). Codes comprises not only linear spaces over
finite fields but modules over some commutative rings. The
connection between codes over finite fields and lattices has been
well documented since the 1970s. Due to an avalanche of results on
codes over rings since the 1990's there is a need for an update at
book level.
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