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Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Theses/Dissertations

2005

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Performance Evaluation Of Distributed Security Protocols Using Discrete Event Simulation, Meiyuan Zhao Oct 2005

Performance Evaluation Of Distributed Security Protocols Using Discrete Event Simulation, Meiyuan Zhao

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) that manages inter-domain routing on the Internet lacks security. Protective measures using public key cryptography introduce complexities and costs. To support authentication and other security functionality in large networks, we need public key infrastructures (PKIs). Protocols that distribute and validate certificates introduce additional complexities and costs. The certification path building algorithm that helps users establish trust on certificates in the distributed network environment is particularly complicated. Neither routing security nor PKI come for free. Prior to this work, the research study on performance issues of these large-scale distributed security systems was minimal. In this thesis, …


Improving Large-Scale Network Traffic Simulation With Multi-Resolution Models, Guanhua Yan Sep 2005

Improving Large-Scale Network Traffic Simulation With Multi-Resolution Models, Guanhua Yan

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Simulating a large-scale network like the Internet is a challenging undertaking because of the sheer volume of its traffic. Packet-oriented representation provides high-fidelity details but is computationally expensive; fluid-oriented representation offers high simulation efficiency at the price of losing packet-level details. Multi-resolution modeling techniques exploit the advantages of both representations by integrating them in the same simulation framework. This dissertation presents solutions to the problems regarding the efficiency, accuracy, and scalability of the traffic simulation models in this framework. The ``ripple effect'' is a well-known problem inherent in event-driven fluid-oriented traffic simulation, causing explosion of fluid rate changes. Integrating multi-resolution …


Efficient Wait-Free Algorithms For Implementing Ll/Sc Objects, Srdjan Petrovic Aug 2005

Efficient Wait-Free Algorithms For Implementing Ll/Sc Objects, Srdjan Petrovic

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Over the past decade, a pair of instructions called load-linked (LL) and store-conditional (SC) have emerged as the most suitable synchronization instructions for the design of lock-free algorithms. However, current architectures do not support these instructions; instead, they support either CAS (e.g., UltraSPARC, Itanium, Pentium) or restricted versions of LL/SC (e.g., POWER4, MIPS, Alpha). Thus, there is a gap between what algorithm designers want (namely, LL/SC) and what multiprocessors actually support (namely, CAS or restricted LL/SC). To bridge this gap, this thesis presents a series of efficient, wait-free algorithms that implement LL/SC from CAS or restricted LL/SC.


Natural Image Statistics For Digital Image Forensics, Siwei Lyu Aug 2005

Natural Image Statistics For Digital Image Forensics, Siwei Lyu

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

We describe a set of natural image statistics that are built upon two multi-scale image decompositions, the quadrature mirror filter pyramid decomposition and the local angular harmonic decomposition. These image statistics consist of first- and higher-order statistics that capture certain statistical regularities of natural images. We propose to apply these image statistics, together with classification techniques, to three problems in digital image forensics: (1) differentiating photographic images from computer-generated photorealistic images, (2) generic steganalysis; (3) rebroadcast image detection. We also apply these image statistics to the traditional art authentication for forgery detection and identification of artists in an art work. …


On-Line Metasearch, Pooling, And System Evaluation, Robert A. Savell Jun 2005

On-Line Metasearch, Pooling, And System Evaluation, Robert A. Savell

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

This thesis presents a unified method for simultaneous solution of three problems in Information Retrieval--- metasearch (the fusion of ranked lists returned by retrieval systems to elicit improved performance), efficient system evaluation (the accurate evaluation of retrieval systems with small numbers of relevance judgements), and pooling or ``active sample selection" (the selection of documents for manual judgement in order to develop sample pools of high precision or pools suitable for assessing system quality). The thesis establishes a unified theoretical framework for addressing these three problems and naturally generalizes their solution to the on-line context by incorporating feedback in the form …