NutMiC2019: Number-Theoretic Methods in Cryptology 2019 Campus Pierre et Marie Curie, Place Jussieu PARIS, France, June 24-27, 2019 |
Conference website | http://nutmic2019.imj-prg.fr/ |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=nutmic2019 |
Submission deadline | February 28, 2019 |
The aim of the NutMic conference series is to cross-fertilize Number Theory and Cryptology. On the one hand, the conference intends to explore current and future Number Theory challenges that arise from the rapidly evolving field of modern Cryptology. On the other hand, it targets investigating and applying Number Theoretic methods in the design and analysis of cryptologic systems and protocols. Besides the well-established connections between the two domains such as primality testing, factorisation, elliptic curves, lattices (to mention a few), the conference endeavours to forge new ones that would encompass Number Theory structures and algorithms that have not successfully been used in Cryptology before. It is expected that these new connections would lead to novel, more efficient and secure cryptographic systems and protocols. Conversely, adressing problems of cryptographic origins may allow to advance the state of the art about some problems and conjectures in Number-Theory.
Publication
All submissions must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another journal or conference.
NutMiC2019 post-proceedings will be published in the Journal of Mathematical Cryptology. Note that the papers attached to the conference presentations will be thoroughly reviewed before publication.
List of Topics
- Lattice based cryptography
- Elliptic and higher genus curves
- Bilinear and multilinear maps
- Analytic tools with applications to cryptology
- Modular forms and their applications
- Hard problems stemming from number theory
- Number and Function Fields
- Sieve techniques
Invited Speakers
- Dan Boneh
- Alain Couvreur
- Hendrik Lenstra
- Alfred Menezes
- René Schoof
Program Committee
- Divesh Aggarwal, NUS, Singapore
- Xavier Boyen, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
- Chris Charnes, Institut für Angewandte Physik - Theorie, Darmstadt, Germany
- Nicolas Courtois, University College London, United Kingdom
- Ronald Cramer, CWI, Netherlands
- Andrzej Dąbrowski, University of Szczecin, Poland
- Gerhard Frey, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
- Faruk Gologlu, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic
- Louis Goubin, University of Versailles, France
- Aline Gouget, Gemalto, France
- Antoine Joux (co-chair), Fondation SU, IMJ, France
- Arjen Lenstra, EPFL, Switzerland
- Jerzy Kaczorowski, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland
- Mieczysław Kula, University of Silesia, Poland
- Alexander May, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany
- Ariane Mézard, Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu, France
- Giacomo Micheli, Oxford University, UK
- Andrew Odlyzko, University of Minnesota, USA
- Alina Ostafe, University of New South Wales, Australia
- Andrzej Paszkiewicz, Military University of Technology Warsaw, Poland
- Jerzy Pejaś, West Pomeranian University of Technology, Poland
- Rene Peralta, NIST, USA
- Josef Pieprzyk, Data61, CSIRO, Sydney, Australia and Institute of Computer Science, PAN, Warsaw, Poland
- Jacek Pomykała (co-chair), University of Warsaw, Poland
- Olivier Ramaré, Aix Marseille Université , France
- Piotr Sapiecha, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland
- Igor Shparlinski, University of New South Wales, Australia
- Mariusz Skałba, University of Warsaw, Poland
- Janusz Szmidt, Military Communication Institute, Zegrze, Poland
- Frederik Vercauteren, KU Leuven, ESAT/COSIC, Belgium
- Vanessa Vitse, Université Grenoble Alpes, France
- Christine van Vredendaal, Eindhoven, Netherlands
- Huaxiong Wang, NTU, Singapore
- Chaoping Xing, NTU, Singapore
- Bartosz Źrałek, University of Warsaw, Poland