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Eavesdropping on Semantic Communication: Timing Attacks and Countermeasures

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Semantic communication is a new paradigm that considers the meaning of transmitted information to optimize communication. One possible application is the remote monitoring of a process under communication costs: scheduling updates based on semantic considerations can significantly reduce transmission frequency while maintaining high-quality tracking performance. However, semantic scheduling also opens a timing-based side-channel that an eavesdropper may exploit to obtain information about the state of the remote process, even if the content of updates is perfectly secure. In this work, we study an eavesdropping attack against pull-based semantic scheduling for the tracking of remote Markov processes. We provide a theoretical framework for defining the effectiveness of the attack and of possible countermeasures, as well as a practical heuristic that can provide a balance between the performance gains offered by semantic communication and the information leakage.


Batch Universal Prediction

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Large language models (LLMs) have recently gained much popularity due to their surprising ability at generating human-like English sentences. LLMs are essentially predictors, estimating the probability of a sequence of words given the past. Therefore, it is natural to evaluate their performance from a universal prediction perspective. In order to do that fairly, we introduce the notion of batch regret as a modification of the classical average regret, and we study its asymptotical value for add-constant predictors, in the case of memoryless sources and first-order Markov sources.


On the R\'{e}nyi Cross-Entropy

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The R\'{e}nyi cross-entropy measure between two distributions, a generalization of the Shannon cross-entropy, was recently used as a loss function for the improved design of deep learning generative adversarial networks. In this work, we examine the properties of this measure and derive closed-form expressions for it when one of the distributions is fixed and when both distributions belong to the exponential family. We also analytically determine a formula for the cross-entropy rate for stationary Gaussian processes and for finite-alphabet Markov sources.


Replica Analysis of the Linear Model with Markov or Hidden Markov Signal Priors

arXiv.org Machine Learning

This paper estimates free energy, average mutual information, and minimum mean square error (MMSE) of a linear model under two assumptions: (1) the source is generated by a Markov chain, (2) the source is generated via a hidden Markov model. Our estimates are based on the replica method in statistical physics. We show that under the posterior mean estimator, the linear model with Markov sources or hidden Markov sources is decoupled into single-input AWGN channels with state information available at both encoder and decoder where the state distribution follows the left Perron-Frobenius eigenvector with unit Manhattan norm of the stochastic matrix of Markov chains. Numerical results show that the MMSEs obtained via the replica method are good lower bounds to the mean square errors (MSEs) achieved by some well-known approximate message passing algorithms in the research literature. Our estimates are based on the replica method which was developed originally to study mean field approximations in spin glasses [1]. Although this method lacks of rigorous mathematical proof in some particular parts, it has been widely accepted as an analytic tool and utilized to investigate a variety of problems in applied mathematics, information processing, and coding [2]. L. V Truong is with the Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge. A. Related Work The use of the replica method for studying multiuser estimators goes back to [3] where Tanaka determined the asymptotic bit error rate of Marginal-Posterior-Mode (MPM) estimators by employing the replica method.


Bayesian Inference of Regular Grammar and Markov Source Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

In this paper we develop a Bayes criterion which includes the Rissanen complexity, for inferring regular grammar models. We develop two methods for regular grammar Bayesian inference. The fIrst method is based on treating the regular grammar as a I-dimensional Markov source, and the second is based on the combinatoric characteristics of the regular grammar itself. We apply the resulting Bayes criteria to a particular example in order to show the efficiency of each method.


Bayesian Inference of Regular Grammar and Markov Source Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

In this paper we develop a Bayes criterion which includes the Rissanen complexity, for inferring regular grammar models. We develop two methods for regular grammar Bayesian inference. The fIrst method is based on treating the regular grammar as a I-dimensional Markov source, and the second is based on the combinatoric characteristics of the regular grammar itself. We apply the resulting Bayes criteria to a particular example in order to show the efficiency of each method.


Bayesian Inference of Regular Grammar and Markov Source Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

In this paper we develop a Bayes criterion which includes the Rissanen complexity, for inferring regular grammar models. We develop two methods for regular grammar Bayesian inference. The fIrst method is based on treating the regular grammar as a I-dimensional Markov source, and the second is based on the combinatoric characteristics of the regular grammar itself. We apply the resulting Bayes criteria to a particular example in order to show the efficiency of each method.