Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Math., Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan
Abstract :
Shannon theory had been considered as an unpractical engineering theory because the obtained optimizations focused on the asymptotic analysis, which are far from a practical setting. However, recent progresses are resolving this defect from achieving finite-length analysis on several information theoretical topics based on the traditional asymptotic results. These progresses enable us to evaluate the performances of realizable systems. The main factors of this research stream are the reflection for the traditional stream and the progress of the method of information spectrum, which has mainly been developed in Japan. However, we cannot ignore the effect by the min entropy developed in cryptography community and the practical demands required by the quantum cryptography system. As results, the finite-length theory has been developed in an interdisciplinary area across information theory community, the communication theory, cryptography theory, and quantum information theory. In this talk, we review the finite-length analysis for the secure random number generation as the most successful case, and briefly explain its extension to source coding, channel coding, and the quantum extension.
Keywords :
channel coding; cryptography; information theory; random number generation; Shannon theory; asymptotic analysis; channel coding; coding theorems; communication theory; cryptography community; cryptography theory; finite-length analysis; finite-length theory; information spectrum; information theoretical topics; information theory community; min entropy; quantum cryptography system; quantum extension; quantum information theory; secret random number generation; secure random number generation; source coding; unpractical engineering theory; Channel coding; Complexity theory; Data compression; Entropy; Random number generation; Finite-length analysis; channel coding; data compression; quantum information; secure random number;