C
Chris J. Mitchell
Researcher at Royal Holloway, University of London
Publications - 408
Citations - 11842
Chris J. Mitchell is an academic researcher from Royal Holloway, University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Authentication & Cryptography. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 397 publications receiving 10982 citations. Previous affiliations of Chris J. Mitchell include Johns Hopkins University & University of Portland.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Scalable RFID security protocols supporting tag ownership transfer
Boyeon Song,Chris J. Mitchell +1 more
TL;DR: A novel scalable RFID authentication protocol based on the scheme presented in Song and Mitchell (2009) [1], that takes constant time to authenticate a tag is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Toward the human cellular microRNAome
Matthew N. McCall,Min-Sik Kim,Min-Sik Kim,Mohammed Adil,Arun H. Patil,Yin Lu,Chris J. Mitchell,Pamela Leal-Rojas,Jinchong Xu,Manoj Kumar,Valina L. Dawson,Ted M. Dawson,Alexander S. Baras,Avi Z. Rosenberg,Dan E. Arking,Kathleen H. Burns,Akhilesh Pandey,Marc K. Halushka +17 more
TL;DR: This project evaluated 8 billion small RNA-seq reads and identified both specific and ubiquitous patterns of expression that strongly correlate with adjacent superenhancer activity, establishing the landscape of human cell-specific microRNA expression.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Security vulnerabilities in DNS and DNSSEC
TL;DR: An analysis of security vulnerabilities in the domain name system (DNS) and the DNS security extensions (DNSSEC) is presented, and the associated security vulnerabilities are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI
Improved glucose homeostasis and enhanced insulin signalling in Grb14‐deficient mice
Gregory J. Cooney,Ruth J. Lyons,A. Jayne Crew,Thomas E. Jensen,Juan Carlos Molero,Chris J. Mitchell,Trevor J. Biden,Christopher J. Ormandy,David E. James,Roger J. Daly +9 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Grb14 functions in vivo as a tissue‐specific modulator of insulin action, most likely via repression of IR‐mediated IRS‐1 tyrosine phosphorylation, and highlighted this protein as a potential target for therapeutic intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI
Forward and backward blocking of causal judgment is enhanced by additivity of effect magnitude
TL;DR: The results confirm that blocking is constrained when effect magnitude is constrained and provide support for an inferential account of cue competition.