Karthik. Thiyagarajan

Work place: Dalhousie University/Electrical and Computer, B3J3L3, Halifax, Canada

E-mail: kr318490@dal.ca

Website:

Research Interests: Computer systems and computational processes, Computer Architecture and Organization, Systems Architecture, Data Compression, Data Structures and Algorithms

Biography

Karthik Thiyagarajan was born in Kuwait. He received his bachelors Electronics and Communication Engineering in Anna University, Chennai, India in 2010 and Post Graduate Diploma in embedded system design from NIIT, Calicut, India. He finished a master’s degree in Dalhousie University Halifax, NS, Canada. Currently he works as a Algorithm engineer (Cryptography and Security) in NRC, Canada. His research interests are embedded systems, cryptography and Compression for video.

Author Articles
Low Complexity Multimedia Encryption

By Karthik. Thiyagarajan Kamal El-Sankary Yongsheng Wang Issam Hammad

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijcnis.2016.04.01, Pub. Date: 8 Apr. 2016

Selective encryption algorithms have been proposed to encrypt syntax elements such as intra prediction modes, the sign bit of nonzero DCT coefficients, along with the sign bit of motion vectors. These syntax elements are sensitive enough to produce effective scrambling effect with a relative low computational cost. In this paper, a novel scheme is proposed to further optimize the computational overhead incurred by the encryption for energy critical multimedia applications. The proposed scheme adjusts the selection of syntax elements to be encrypted according to the scene transitions within adjacent video frames. The ratio of intra-coded macroblocks in inter (P and B) frames is calculated and compared with an adaptive threshold value to detect the scene transitions. Furthermore, based on statistical analysis for a few video sequences, a dynamic threshold model to detect the scene transition is proposed. When there is a scene transition between the previous video frame and the current video frame, intra prediction modes and the sign bit of DCT coefficients in the current frame are chosen as syntax elements to be encrypted, whereas in the absence of a scene transition, the sign bit of motion vectors is chosen as the only sensitive syntax elements to be encrypted. Experimental results show that compared with previous work in this field, the proposed scheme can efficiently lower the computational cost incurred by the encryption while maintaining a similar perceptual scrambling effect.

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