Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Mobile multimedia applications, the focus of many
forthcoming wireless services, increasingly demand low-power
techniques implementing content protection and customer
privacy. In this paper low complexity perception-based partial encryption
schemes for speech are presented. Speech compressed by
a widely-used speech coding algorithm, the ITU-T G.729 standard
at 8 kb/s, is partitioned in two classes, one, the most perceptually
relevant, to be encrypted, the other, to be left unprotected. Two
partial-encryption techniques are developed, a low-protection
scheme, aimed at preventing most kinds of eavesdropping and a
high-protection scheme, based on the encryption of a larger share
of perceptually important bits and meant to perform as well as
full encryption of the compressed bitstream. The high-protection
scheme, based on the encryption of about 45% of the bitstream,
achieves content protection comparable to that obtained by full
encryption, as verified by both objective measures and formal
listening tests. For the low-protection scheme, encryption of as
little as 30% of the bitstream virtually eliminates intelligibility as
well as most of the remaining perceptual information. Low-power,
portable devices could therefore achieve very high levels of
speech-content protection at only 3045% of the computational
load of current techniques, freeing resources for other tasks and
enabling longer battery life.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
voice processing; encryption; security; voice quality
List of contributors:
DE MARTIN, JUAN CARLOS
Published in: