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Yongge Wang

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Computer science professor

Yongge Wang (born 1967) is a computer science professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte specialized in algorithmic complexity and cryptography. He is the inventor of IEEE P1363 cryptographic standards SRP5 and WANG-KE and has contributed to the mathematical theory of algorithmic randomness. He co-authored a paper demonstrating that a recursively enumerable real number is an algorithmically random sequence if and only if it is a Chaitin's constant for some encoding of programs. He also showed the separation of Schnorr randomness from recursive randomness. He also invented a distance based statistical testing technique to improve NIST SP800-22 testing in randomness tests. In cryptographic research, he is known for the invention of the quantum resistant random linear code based encryption scheme RLCE.

References

  1. "IEEE P1363.2 Draft Download". IEEE. Archived from the original on May 5, 2002. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  2. "Identity-Based Public-Key Cryptography". IEEE. Archived from the original on May 2, 2006. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  3. "Inaugural Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorw¨urde der Naturwissenschaftlich-Mathematischen Gesamtfakult¨at der Ruprecht-Karls-Universit¨at Heidelberg vorgelegt von Yongge Wang aus Gansu, China 1996 Randomness and Complexity Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Klaus Ambos-Spies Prof. Dr. Jack Lutz Tag der m¨undlichen Pr¨ufung: August 30, 1996" (PDF). Webpages.uncc.edu. Retrieved 2017-08-22.
  4. Wang, Yongge (28 December 2015). "Quantum Resistant Random Linear Code Based Public Key Encryption Scheme RLCE". arXiv:1512.08454 .
  5. "Quantum Resistant RLCE Encryption Scheme". Retrieved 2017-10-02.

External links



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