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Institution

AT&T Labs

Company
About: AT&T Labs is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Network packet & The Internet. The organization has 1879 authors who have published 5595 publications receiving 483151 citations.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: Graphviz is a collection of software for viewing and manipulating abstract graphs that provides graph visualization for tools and web sites in domains such as software engineering, networking, databases, knowledge representation, and bioinformatics.
Abstract: Graphviz is a collection of software for viewing and manipulating abstract graphs. It provides graph visualization for tools and web sites in domains such as software engineering, networking, databases, knowledge representation, and bioinformatics. Hundreds of thousands of copies have been distributed under an open source license.

469 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a structural metric that allows us to differentiate between simple, connected graphs having an identical degree sequence, which is of particular interest when that sequence satisfies a power law relationship.
Abstract: There is a large, popular, and growing literature on "scale-free" networks with the Internet along with metabolic networks representing perhaps the canonical examples. While this has in many ways reinvigorated graph theory, there is unfortunately no consistent, precise definition of scale-free graphs and few rigorous proofs of many of their claimed properties. In fact, it is easily shown that the existing theory has many inherent contradictions and that the most celebrated claims regarding the Internet and biology are verifiably false. In this paper, we introduce a structural metric that allows us to differentiate between all simple, connected graphs having an identical degree sequence, which is of particular interest when that sequence satisfies a power law relationship. We demonstrate that the proposed structural metric yields considerable insight into the claimed properties of SF graphs and provides one possible measure of the extent to which a graph is scale-free. This structural view can be related t...

469 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Mikkel Thorup1
TL;DR: A deterministic linear time and linear space algorithm is presented for the undirected single source shortest paths problem with positive integer weights, which avoids the sorting bottleneck by building a hierarchical bucketing structure.
Abstract: The single-source shortest paths problem (SSSP) is one of the classic problems in algorithmic graph theory: given a positively weighted graph G with a source vertex s, find the shortest path from s to all other vertices in the graph.Since 1959, all theoretical developments in SSSP for general directed and undirected graphs have been based on Dijkstra's algorithm, visiting the vertices in order of increasing distance from s. Thus, any implementation of Dijkstra's algorithm sorts the vertices according to their distances from s. However, we do not know how to sort in linear time.Here, a deterministic linear time and linear space algorithm is presented for the undirected single source shortest paths problem with positive integer weights. The algorithm avoids the sorting bottleneck by building a hierarchical bucketing structure, identifying vertex pairs that may be visited in any order.

469 citations

Book ChapterDOI
06 May 2001
TL;DR: The first one-round (two-pass) protocol for oblivious transfer that does not rely on the random oracle model is presented, which is a special case of a more general "conditional disclosure" methodology, which extends a previous approach from [11] and adapts it to the 2-party setting.
Abstract: We consider the question of protecting the privacy of customers buying digital goods. More specifically, our goal is to allow a buyer to purchase digital goods from a vendor without letting the vendor learn what, and to the extent possible also when and how much, it is buying. We propose solutions which allow the buyer, after making an initial deposit, to engage in an unlimited number of priced oblivious-transfer protocols, satisfying the following requirements: As long as the buyer's balance contains sufficient funds, it will successfully retrieve the selected item and its balance will be debited by the item's price. However, the buyer should be unable to retrieve an item whose cost exceeds its remaining balance. The vendor should learn nothing except what must inevitably be learned, namely, the amount of interaction and the initial deposit amount (which imply upper bounds on the quantity and total price of all information obtained by the buyer). In particular, the vendor should be unable to learn what the buyer's current balance is or when it actually runs out of its funds. The technical tools we develop, in the process of solving this problem, seem to be of independent interest. In particular, we present the first one-round (two-pass) protocol for oblivious transfer that does not rely on the random oracle model (a very similar protocol was independently proposed by Naor and Pinkas [21]). This protocol is a special case of a more general "conditional disclosure" methodology, which extends a previous approach from [11] and adapts it to the 2-party setting.

468 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
William W. Cohen1
01 Jun 1998
TL;DR: This paper rejects the assumption that global domains can be easily constructed, and assumes instead that the names are given in natural language text, and proposes a logic called WHIRL which reasons explicitly about the similarity of local names, as measured using the vector-space model commonly adopted in statistical information retrieval.
Abstract: Most databases contain “name constants” like course numbers, personal names, and place names that correspond to entities in the real world. Previous work in integration of heterogeneous databases has assumed that local name constants can be mapped into an appropriate global domain by normalization. However, in many cases, this assumption does not hold; determining if two name constants should be considered identical can require detailed knowledge of the world, the purpose of the user's query, or both. In this paper, we reject the assumption that global domains can be easily constructed, and assume instead that the names are given in natural language text. We then propose a logic called WHIRL which reasons explicitly about the similarity of local names, as measured using the vector-space model commonly adopted in statistical information retrieval. We describe an efficient implementation of WHIRL and evaluate it experimentally on data extracted from the World Wide Web. We show that WHIRL is much faster than naive inference methods, even for short queries. We also show that inferences made by WHIRL are surprisingly accurate, equaling the accuracy of hand-coded normalization routines on one benchmark problem, and outperforming exact matching with a plausible global domain on a second.

468 citations


Authors

Showing all 1881 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yoshua Bengio2021033420313
Scott Shenker150454118017
Paul Shala Henry13731835971
Peter Stone130122979713
Yann LeCun121369171211
Louis E. Brus11334763052
Jennifer Rexford10239445277
Andreas F. Molisch9677747530
Vern Paxson9326748382
Lorrie Faith Cranor9232628728
Ward Whitt8942429938
Lawrence R. Rabiner8837870445
Thomas E. Graedel8634827860
William W. Cohen8538431495
Michael K. Reiter8438030267
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20225
202133
202069
201971
2018100
201791