Daniele Micciancio's Home Page

[Research] [Teaching] [Papers] [Book]
The CSE200 class webpage is now at http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/classes/fa08/cse200
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Address: University of California, San Diego
Computer Science & Engineering Department
9500 Gilman Drive, Mail code 0404. La Jolla, CA 92093-5004, USA
Phone: (858) 822-2577. Fax: (858) 534-7029
E-mail: daniele(at)cs.ucsd.edu

I am an associate professor in the Computer Science & Engineering department at the University of California, San Diego. I am a member of the Cryptography and Security group and the Theory of Computation group. My research interests include:

See research projects and publications web pages for more information about my research. If you want to know more about lattices and their cryptographic applications, take course CSE206A: Lattice Algorithms and Applications (usually offered every three years) or read my book Complexity of lattice problems: a cryptographic perspective.


Most recent papers (full list)

  1. Worst-case to average-case reductions based on Gaussian measure - SIAM J. on Computing 37(1):267-302 (2007).
  2. Generalized compact knapsaks, cyclic lattices, and efficient one-way functions - Computational Complexity, 16(4):365-411 (2007).
  3. Cryptographic functions from worst-case complexity assumptions - LLL+25.
  4. Efficient reductions among lattice problems - SODA 2008.
  5. Asymptotically efficient lattice-based digital signatures - TCC 2008
  6. The round-complexity of black-box zero-knowledge: a combinatorial characterization - TCC 2008
  7. SWIFFT: a modest proposal for FFT hashing - FSE 2008
  8. Optimal communication complexity of generic multicast key distribution - IEEE/ACM Trans. on Networking, 16(4):803-813 (2008).
  9. Efficient bounded distance decoders for Barnes-Wall lattices - ISIT 2008.
  10. An indistinguishability-based characterization of anonymous channels - PETS 2008

Professional Activities


Students

Current PhD students: Scott Yilek, Panagiotis Voulgaris, Petros Mol

Past students: Fritz Schneider (MS 2002), Bogdan Warinschi (PhD 2004), Alejandro Hevia (PhD 2006), Saurabh Panjwani (PhD 2007), Vadim Lyubashevsky (PhD 2008).


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