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Colloquium March 14

Date: Friday March 14

Time: 16:00 to 17:00

Place: 216 McBryde

Speaker: Joachim Rosenthal of University of Notre Dame

Title: Reflections on Shannon's Three Challenges

Abstract

In 1948/1949 Claude Shannon wrote two papers which became the foundation of modern information theory. The papers showed that information can be compressed up to the `entropy', that data can be transmitted error free at a rate below the capacity and that there exist provable secure cryptographic systems. These were all fundamental theoretical result. The challenge remained to build practical systems which came close to the theoretical optimal systems predicted by Shannon.

In this overview talk we will explain how the first two challenges concerning coding theory have resulted in practical solutions which are very close to optimal. Then we explain why the gap between the practical implementation of cryptographic protocols with the theoretical result of Shannon is largest.

The talk will be tutorial in nature and should be accessible to advanced undergraduate students.

References

C.E. Shannon, A mathematical theory of communication, Bell System Tech. J. 27 (1948), 379-423 and 623-656.

C.E. Shannon, Communication theory of secrecy systems, Bell System Tech. J. 28 (1949), 656-715.


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