Paper
22 June 2004 Securing display of grayscale and multicolored images by use of visual cryptography
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Security has become an important issue as information technology has become increasingly pervasive in our everyday lives. Security risks arise with a display that shows decrypted information. In this paper, we propose a secure information display technique using visual cryptography. Its decryption requires no special computing devices and is implemented using only human vision: the proposed display appears as a random pattern to anyone who looks at it unless the person views the displayed image through a decoding mask. We have constructed code sets to represent grayscale and multicolored images. Each pixel in a secret image is expanded to a group of subpixels. The displayed image consists of black and white subpixels to encrypt a grayscale image. To encrypt a multicolor image, black, red, green, and blue subpixels compose the displayed image. The decoding mask consists of transparent and opaque subpixels. Every pixel is encrypted using a pair that is chosen at random. We have demonstrated the proposed secure display with an LCD panel and a transparency on which a decoding mask was printed. The secret image was visible for a viewer within the viewing zone, although viewers outside the viewing zone perceived it as a random dot pattern.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Hirotsugu Yamamoto, Yoshio Hayasaki, and Nobuo Nishida "Securing display of grayscale and multicolored images by use of visual cryptography", Proc. SPIE 5306, Security, Steganography, and Watermarking of Multimedia Contents VI, (22 June 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.528495
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Visualization

Cryptography

Image encryption

LCDs

Information security

Phase modulation

Information visualization

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