Sciweavers

ACSC
2006
IEEE

On pedagogically sound examples in public-key cryptography

13 years 10 months ago
On pedagogically sound examples in public-key cryptography
Pencil-and-paper exercises in public-key cryptography are important in learning the subject. It is desirable that a student doing such an exercise does not get the right answer by a wrong method. We therefore seek exercises that are sound in the sense that a student who makes one of several common errors will get a wrong answer. Such exercises are difficult to construct by hand. This paper considers how to do so automatically, and describes software developed for this purpose, covering several popular cryptosystems (RSA, Diffie-Hellman, Massey-Omura, ElGamal, Knapsack). We also introduce diagnostic exercises, in which all error paths lead to different answers, so that the answer given by the student may suggest the nature of their error. These too can be generated automatically by our software.
Suan Khai Chong, Graham Farr, Laura Frost, Simon H
Added 10 Jun 2010
Updated 10 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where ACSC
Authors Suan Khai Chong, Graham Farr, Laura Frost, Simon Hawley
Comments (0)