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[Author] Mamoru OKUMURA(4hit)

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  • Multi-Level Encrypted Transmission Scheme Using Hybrid Chaos and Linear Modulation Open Access

    Tomoki KAGA  Mamoru OKUMURA  Eiji OKAMOTO  Tetsuya YAMAMOTO  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2021/10/25
      Vol:
    E105-B No:5
      Page(s):
    638-647

    In the fifth-generation mobile communications system (5G), it is critical to ensure wireless security as well as large-capacity and high-speed communication. To achieve this, a chaos modulation method as an encrypted and channel-coded modulation method in the physical layer is proposed. However, in the conventional chaos modulation method, the decoding complexity increases exponentially with respect to the modulation order. To solve this problem, in this study, a hybrid modulation method that applies quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) and chaos to reduce the amount of decoding complexity, in which some transmission bits are allocated to QAM while maintaining the encryption for all bits is proposed. In the proposed method, a low-complexity decoding method is constructed by ordering chaos and QAM symbols based on the theory of index modulation. Numerical results show that the proposed method maintains good error-rate performance with reduced decoding complexity and ensures wireless security.

  • Performance Improvement of Radio-Wave Encrypted MIMO Communications Using Average LLR Clipping Open Access

    Mamoru OKUMURA  Keisuke ASANO  Takumi ABE  Eiji OKAMOTO  Tetsuya YAMAMOTO  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2022/02/15
      Vol:
    E105-B No:8
      Page(s):
    931-943

    In recent years, there has been significant interest in information-theoretic security techniques that encrypt physical layer signals. We have proposed chaos modulation, which has both physical layer security and channel coding gain, as one such technique. In the chaos modulation method, the channel coding gain can be increased using a turbo mechanism that exchanges the log-likelihood ratio (LLR) with an external concatenated code using the max-log approximation. However, chaos modulation, which is a type of Gaussian modulation, does not use fixed mapping, and the distance between signal points is not constant; therefore, the accuracy of the max-log approximated LLR degrades under poor channel conditions. As a result, conventional methods suffer from performance degradation owing to error propagation in turbo decoding. Therefore, in this paper, we propose a new LLR clipping method that can be optimally applied to chaos modulation by limiting the confidence level of LLR and suppressing error propagation. For effective clipping on chaos modulation that does not have fixed mappings, the average confidence value is obtained from the extrinsic LLR calculated from the demodulator and decoder, and clipping is performed based on this value, either in the demodulator or the decoder. Numerical results indicated that the proposed method achieves the same performance as the one using the exact LLR, which requires complicated calculations. Furthermore, the security feature of the proposed system is evaluated, and we observe that sufficient security is provided.

  • High-Quality Secure Wireless Transmission Scheme Using Polar Codes and Radio-Wave Encrypted Modulation Open Access

    Keisuke ASANO  Mamoru OKUMURA  Takumi ABE  Eiji OKAMOTO  Tetsuya YAMAMOTO  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2022/10/03
      Vol:
    E106-B No:4
      Page(s):
    374-383

    In recent years, physical layer security (PLS), which is based on information theory and whose strength does not depend on the eavesdropper's computing capability, has attracted much attention. We have proposed a chaos modulation method as one PLS method that offers channel coding gain. One alternative is based on polar codes. They are robust error-correcting codes, have a nested structure in the encoder, and the application of this mechanism to PLS encryption (PLS-polar) has been actively studied. However, most conventional studies assume the application of conventional linear modulation such as BPSK, do not use encryption modulation, and the channel coding gain in the modulation is not achieved. In this paper, we propose a PLS-polar method that can realize high-quality transmission and encryption of a modulated signal by applying chaos modulation to a polar-coding system. Numerical results show that the proposed method improves the performance compared to the conventional PLS-polar method by 0.7dB at a block error rate of 10-5. In addition, we show that the proposed method is superior to conventional chaos modulation concatenated with low-density parity-check codes, indicating that the polar code is more suitable for chaos modulation. Finally, it is demonstrated that the proposed method is secure in terms of information theoretical and computational security.

  • Demonstration of Chaos-Based Radio Encryption Modulation Scheme through Wired Transmission Experiments Open Access

    Kenya TOMITA  Mamoru OKUMURA  Eiji OKAMOTO  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2023/01/25
      Vol:
    E106-B No:8
      Page(s):
    686-695

    With the recent commercialization of fifth-generation mobile communication systems (5G), wireless communications are being used in various fields. Accordingly, the number of situations in which sensitive information, such as personal data is handled in wireless communications is increasing, and so is the demand for confidentiality. To meet this demand, we proposed a chaos-based radio-encryption modulation that combines physical layer confidentiality and channel coding effects, and we have demonstrated its effectiveness through computer simulations. However, there are no demonstrations of performances using real signals. In this study, we constructed a transmission system using Universal Software Radio Peripheral, a type of software-defined radio, and its control software LabVIEW. We conducted wired transmission experiments for the practical use of radio-frequency encrypted modulation. The results showed that a gain of 0.45dB at a bit error rate of 10-3 was obtained for binary phase-shift keying, which has the same transmission efficiency as the proposed method under an additive white Gaussian noise channel. Similarly, a gain of 10dB was obtained under fading conditions. We also evaluated the security ability and demonstrated that chaos modulation has both information-theoretic security and computational security.