1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910777307303321

Titolo

Digital watermarking and steganography [[electronic resource] /] / Ingemar J. Cox ... [et al.]

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, c2008

ISBN

1-281-09616-4

9786611096168

0-08-055580-2

Edizione

[2nd ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (623 p.)

Collana

The Morgan Kaufmann series in multimedia information and systems

The Morgan kaufmann series in computer security

Altri autori (Persone)

CoxI. J (Ingemar J.)

Disciplina

005.8

Soggetti

Computer security

Digital watermarking

Data protection

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Prev. ed. entered under Cox.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. 549-574) and index.

Nota di contenuto

Front Cover; Digital Watermarking and Steganography; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface to the First Edition; Preface to the Second Edition; Example Watermarking Systems; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 Information Hiding, Steganography, and Watermarking; 1.2 History of Watermarking; 1.3 History of Steganography; 1.4 Importance of Digital Watermarking; 1.5 Importance of Steganography; Chapter 2. Applications and Properties; 2.1 Applications of Watermarking; 2.2 Applications of Steganography; 2.3 Properties of Watermarking Systems; 2.4 Evaluating Watermarking Systems

2.5 Properties of Steganographic and Steganalysis Systems2.6 Evaluating and Testing Steganographic Systems; 2.7 Summary; Chapter 3. Models of Watermarking; 3.1 Notation; 3.2 Communications; 3.3 Communication-Based Models of Watermarking; 3.4 Geometric Models of Watermarking; 3.5 Modeling Watermark Detection by Correlation; 3.6 Summary; Chapter 4. Basic Message Coding; 4.1 Mapping Messages into Message Vectors; 4.2 Error Correction Coding; 4.3 Detecting Multisymbol Watermarks; 4.4 Summary; Chapter 5. Watermarking with Side Information; 5.1 Informed Embedding



5.2 Watermarking Using Side Information5.3 Dirty-Paper Codes; 5.4 Summary; Chapter 6. Practical Dirty-Paper Codes; 6.1 Practical Considerations for Dirty-Paper Codes; 6.2 Broad Approaches to Dirty-Paper Code Design; 6.3 Implementing DM with A Simple Lattice Code; 6.4 Typical Tricks in Implementing Lattice Codes; 6.5 Coding with Better Lattices; 6.6 Making Lattice Codes Survive Valumetric Scaling; 6.7 Dirty-Paper Trellis Codes; 6.8 Summary; Chapter 7. Analyzing Errors; 7.1 Message Errors; 7.2 False Positive Errors; 7.3 False Negative Errors; 7.4 ROC Curves

7.5 The Effect of Whitening on Error Rates7.6 Analysis of Normalized Correlation; 7.7 Summary; Chapter 8. Using Perceptual Models; 8.1 Evaluating Perceptual Impact of Watermarks; 8.2 General Form of A Perceptual Model; 8.3 Two Examples of Perceptual Models; 8.4 Perceptually Adaptive Watermarking; 8.5 Summary; Chapter 9. Robust Watermarking; 9.1 Approaches; 9.2 Robustness to Valumetric Distortions; 9.3 Robustness to Temporal and Geometric Distortions; 9.4 Summary; Chapter 10. Watermark Security; 10.1 Security Requirements; 10.2 Watermark Security and Cryptography

10.3 Some Significant Known Attacks10.4 Summary; Chapter 11. Content Authentication; 11.1 Exact Authentication; 11.2 Selective Authentication; 11.3 Localization; 11.4 Restoration; 11.5 Summary; Chapter 12. Steganography; 12.1 Steganographic Communication; 12.2 Notation and Terminology; 12.3 Information-Theoretic Foundations of Steganography; 12.4 Practical Steganographic Methods; 12.5 Minimizing the Embedding Impact; 12.6 Summary; Chapter 13. Steganalysis; 13.1 Steganalysis Scenarios; 13.2 Some Significant Steganalysis Algorithms; 13.3 Summary; Appendix A. Background Concepts

A.1 Information Theory

Sommario/riassunto

Digital audio, video, images, and documents are flying through cyberspace to their respective owners. Unfortunately, along the way, individuals may choose to intervene and take this content for themselves. Digital watermarking and steganography technology greatly reduces the instances of this by limiting or eliminating the ability of third parties to decipher the content that he has taken. The many techiniques of digital watermarking (embedding a code) and steganography (hiding information) continue to evolve as applications that necessitate them do the same. The authors of this second edition



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910956123203321

Autore

Zachar Peter

Titolo

Psychological concepts and biological psychiatry : a philosophical analysis / / Peter Zachar

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, PA, : J. Benjamins Pub., c2000

ISBN

9786612163937

9781282163935

1282163930

9789027299864

9027299862

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (362 p.)

Collana

Advances in consciousness research, , 1381-589X ; ; v. 28

Disciplina

150/.1

Soggetti

Psychology - Philosophy

Psychiatry - Philosophy

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. [307]-329) and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPTS AND BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Dedication -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Preface: What this book is about -- PART I: THE ATTACK ON PSYCHOLOGY -- Chapter 1. Psychology in Trouble -- Chapter 2. Trouble from Psychiatry: Biomedical materialism -- Chapter 3. Trouble From Philosophy: Eliminative materialism -- PART II: THE ROBUSTNESS OF PSYCHOLOGY -- Chapter 4. Why there is no such thing as "Folk Psychology" -- Chapter 5. A Critique of Anti-Anthropomorphism -- Chapter 6. The Anchors of Psychology -- Chapter 7. Materialism Without Physicalism -- PART III: THE PSYCHOLOGY IN PSYCHIATRY -- Chapter 8. Diagnosis, Behavior, and First-Person Information -- Chapter 9. Evolution, Adaptation, and Psychiatry -- Chapter 10. Psychiatry, Science, and Anti-essentialism -- Chapter 11. Psychiatry and Reality -- Chapter 12. Psychiatry and the Rhetoric of Morality -- Chapter 13. Reflections -- References -- Name Index -- Subject Index.

Sommario/riassunto

This interdisciplinary work addresses the question, What role should psychological conceptualization play for thinkers who believe that the



brain is the organ of the mind? It offers readers something unique both by systematically comparing the writings of eliminativist philosophers of mind with the writings of the most committed proponents of biological psychiatry, and by critically scrutinizing their shared "anti-anthropomorphism" from the standpoint of a diagnostician and therapist. Contradicitng the contemporary assumption that common sense psychology has already been proven futile, and we are just waiting for an adequate scientifically-based replacement, this book provides explicit philosophical and psychological arguments showing why, if they did not already have both cognitive and psychodynamic psychologies, philosophers and scientists would have to invent them to better understand brains. (Series A).