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Jeng-Shyang Pan

Bio: Jeng-Shyang Pan is an academic researcher from Shandong University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Digital watermarking & Watermark. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 789 publications receiving 11645 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeng-Shyang Pan include National Kaohsiung Normal University & Technical University of Ostrava.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An optimization algorithm based on parallel versions of the bat algorithm, random-key encoding scheme, communication strategy scheme and makespan scheme is proposed to solve the NP-hard job shop scheduling problem.
Abstract: Parallel processing plays an important role in efficient and effective computations of function optimization. In this paper, an optimization algorithm based on parallel versions of the bat algorithm (BA), random-key encoding scheme, communication strategy scheme and makespan scheme is proposed to solve the NP-hard job shop scheduling problem. The aim of the parallel BA with communication strategies is to correlate individuals in swarms and to share the computation load over few processors. Based on the original structure of the BA, the bat populations are split into several independent groups. In addition, the communication strategy provides the diversity-enhanced bats to speed up solutions. In the experiment, forty three instances of the benchmark in job shop scheduling data set with various sizes are used to test the behavior of the convergence, and accuracy of the proposed method. The results compared with the other methods in the literature show that the proposed scheme increases more the convergence and the accuracy than BA and particle swarm optimization.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental results illustrate that the proposed scheme outperforms ZM/PZM based schemes in terms of embedding capacity and watermark robustness and is also robust to both geometric and signal processing based attacks.

105 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: FESPSO, a new fitness estimation strategy, is proposed for particle swarm optimization to reduce the number of fitness evaluations, thereby reducing the computational cost.

105 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Due to the noise induced during the transmission of data, reliable transmission of compressed multimedia is also an important issue in both academic research and real applications.
Abstract: Accessing various multimedia contents is something very essential in our daily life. However, delivery of multimedia contents consumes lots of network bandwidths. Therefore, compression of multimedia is very essential, and also an inevitable task for real applications. Moreover, due to the noise induced during the transmission of data, reliable transmission of compressed multimedia is also an important issue in both academic research and real applications.

103 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proved the convergence of a recursive mean shift procedure to the nearest stationary point of the underlying density function and, thus, its utility in detecting the modes of the density.
Abstract: A general non-parametric technique is proposed for the analysis of a complex multimodal feature space and to delineate arbitrarily shaped clusters in it. The basic computational module of the technique is an old pattern recognition procedure: the mean shift. For discrete data, we prove the convergence of a recursive mean shift procedure to the nearest stationary point of the underlying density function and, thus, its utility in detecting the modes of the density. The relation of the mean shift procedure to the Nadaraya-Watson estimator from kernel regression and the robust M-estimators; of location is also established. Algorithms for two low-level vision tasks discontinuity-preserving smoothing and image segmentation - are described as applications. In these algorithms, the only user-set parameter is the resolution of the analysis, and either gray-level or color images are accepted as input. Extensive experimental results illustrate their excellent performance.

11,727 citations

Book
24 Oct 2001
TL;DR: Digital Watermarking covers the crucial research findings in the field and explains the principles underlying digital watermarking technologies, describes the requirements that have given rise to them, and discusses the diverse ends to which these technologies are being applied.
Abstract: Digital watermarking is a key ingredient to copyright protection. It provides a solution to illegal copying of digital material and has many other useful applications such as broadcast monitoring and the recording of electronic transactions. Now, for the first time, there is a book that focuses exclusively on this exciting technology. Digital Watermarking covers the crucial research findings in the field: it explains the principles underlying digital watermarking technologies, describes the requirements that have given rise to them, and discusses the diverse ends to which these technologies are being applied. As a result, additional groundwork is laid for future developments in this field, helping the reader understand and anticipate new approaches and applications.

2,849 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 1999

2,010 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: This paper defines and explores proofs of retrievability (PORs), a POR scheme that enables an archive or back-up service to produce a concise proof that a user can retrieve a target file F, that is, that the archive retains and reliably transmits file data sufficient for the user to recover F in its entirety.
Abstract: In this paper, we define and explore proofs of retrievability (PORs). A POR scheme enables an archive or back-up service (prover) to produce a concise proof that a user (verifier) can retrieve a target file F, that is, that the archive retains and reliably transmits file data sufficient for the user to recover F in its entirety.A POR may be viewed as a kind of cryptographic proof of knowledge (POK), but one specially designed to handle a large file (or bitstring) F. We explore POR protocols here in which the communication costs, number of memory accesses for the prover, and storage requirements of the user (verifier) are small parameters essentially independent of the length of F. In addition to proposing new, practical POR constructions, we explore implementation considerations and optimizations that bear on previously explored, related schemes.In a POR, unlike a POK, neither the prover nor the verifier need actually have knowledge of F. PORs give rise to a new and unusual security definition whose formulation is another contribution of our work.We view PORs as an important tool for semi-trusted online archives. Existing cryptographic techniques help users ensure the privacy and integrity of files they retrieve. It is also natural, however, for users to want to verify that archives do not delete or modify files prior to retrieval. The goal of a POR is to accomplish these checks without users having to download the files themselves. A POR can also provide quality-of-service guarantees, i.e., show that a file is retrievable within a certain time bound.

1,783 citations