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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF CRYPTOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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Journal of Cryptology provides a forum for original results in all areas of modern information security. Both cryptography and cryptanalysis are covered, including information theoretic and complexity theoretic perspectives as well as implementation, application, and standards issues. Illustrative topics include public key and conventional algorithms and their implementations, cryptanalytic attacks, pseudo-random sequences, computational number theory, cryptographic protocols, untraceability, privacy, authentication, key management and quantum cryptography. In addition to full-length technical, survey, and historical articles, short notes are acceptable.
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Instructions to Authors
Manuscript Preparation
 It is an important aim of this journal to achieve a quick turnaround enabling the timely reporting of significant results. 
 All papers should be submitted in English. They should include an introduction explaining the motivation and background for the problems being studied, as well as a short but informative abstract and at least five key words. The corresponding author's telephone number should be given. To submit a paper, four copies of the manuscript to be considered should be sent to any member of the editorial board, or the Editor-in-Chief.
 The journal strongly encourages authors to submit electronically prepared manuscripts in LATEX by electronic mail to any member of the editorial board or the Editor-in-Chief. Follow the instructions set forth here exactly (except that one copy of the submission is sufficient). If, for example, the reference section is incorrectly styled, the value of the electronic submission will be reduced. Please inquire if you do not receive an acknowledgment by electronic mail within one week. 
 Color can be published in the electronic edition of the journal, at no charge to the author, if appropriate electronic files are provided. Color will only be included in the print edition when the author covers the additional expense of color printing. For an exact quote on color printing charges please contact the Production Editor.
 Manuscripts for this journal should be typed on only one side of the page, double spaced, with wide margins all around. All elements of formulae, also, should be typewritten whenever possible.
 Each figure (line drawings and graphs) should be submitted on a separate sheet of paper; each diagram should be drawn precisely in India ink. Lettering should be clear and able to withstand reducing if necessary. Figures should preferably be drawn to fit one half page or less. The maximum reproduction size for the figures is 122 by 194 mm, or 4 3/4 ?7 7/8 in. All diagrams should be numbered consecutively, and their first mention in the text should be noted in the left-hand margin. Legends should be listed consecutively on a single sheet of paper.
 The title page of the article should include all the authors' affiliations and the mailing address of the corresponding author, 5-10 key words, and a detailed abstract emphasizing the main contribution of the paper. The use of mathematical symbols should be kept to a minimum in the abstract.
 Footnotes other than those referring to the title or author affiliation should be avoided. If they are essential, they should be numbered consecutively and listed on a separate  page, following the text.
 References should be cited in the text by arabic numerals in brackets. All references should be gathered together and placed after the end of the text in alphabetical order by the authors' last names; this alphabetical list should be numbered consecutively starting with [1]. For journals, the following information should appear: names (including initials) of all authors, year of publication, full title of paper, journal name, volume, and pages. The citations for papers should include complete titles and publication data. For books, title, publisher, and year should be given, as well as page or section numbers if a specific result is being quoted.  Sample reference style:
 [1] D. E. R. Denning, Cryptography and Data Security, ddison Wesley, Reading, MA, 1982.
 [2] W. Diffie and M. E. Hellman, New directions in cryptography, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol. IT-22, no 6 (1976), pp. 644-654.
 [3] S. Goldwasser, S. Micali, and C. Rackoff, The knowledge complexity of interactive proof systems, Proceedings of the 17th Annual Symposium on Theory of Computing, ACM, 1985, pp. 291-304.
 Upon notification of acceptance, authors will be expected to supply originals of illustrations in a form suitable for photographic reproduction. A standard transfer of copyright will be required.

 Marking the Manuscript
 Once a manuscript has been accepted for publication, the final version should be sent, marked as follows. In text, words, or phrases requiring italic type should be underlined. Only the end of a proof should be indicated by an open square.
 All letters in formulae, as well as single letter symbolism in the text, are automatically printed in italic and therefore require no underlining. Please indicate and indentify letters to be printed as script, openface, Fraktur, and boldface. Please identify any unusual characters.
 Please use pencil for all editorial marks, as the compositor  is likely to interpret an ink mark as an element to be printed. If its appearance is ambiguous, underline a capital letter three times. In complicated sections of the text, mark superscripts and subscripts with a caret: (^) Ordinarily subscripts appear directly below superscripts; they should be typed this way, and marked if variation is desired.
 The following elements are often confused and should be identified by the appropriate previously discussed measures or by a circled word or words explaining the element:
 The letter O and the numeral 0, and the letter l and the numeral 1 occur frequently. Each appearance of one or zero should be identified. The numeral 1 should be written with a hook and baseline bar. Distinguish between the indefinite article a and the italic letter a used in a mathematical context.
 Miscellaneous
 Manuscripts submitted acording to these instructions will reduce considerably the possibility of printer's errors in the proofs. The only corrections to be made in proofs are typographical errors. Should the author wish to correct stylistic or factual errors in proofs, he or she must absorb the cost. Proofs must be checked and returned to the publisher within forty-eight hours of receipt.
 Fifty free reprints will be forwarded to the corresponding author, unless otherwise indicated. Additional reprints can be purchased by filling out the Reprint Order Form which will be sent to corresponding author along with the proofs. Reprints are normally shipped six to eight weeks after publication of the issue in which the item appears.
 Guidelines for Electronically Produced Illustrations for Print
 General
 Send illustrations separately from the text (i.e. files should not be integrated with the text files). Always send printouts of all illustrations.
 Vector (line) Graphics
 Vector graphics exported from a drawing program should be stored in EPS format.
 Suitable drawing program: Adobe Illustrator. For simple line art the following drawing programs are also acceptable: Corel Draw, Freehand, Canvas.
 No rules narrower than .25 pt.
 No gray screens paler than 15% or darker than 60%. 
 Screens meant to be differentiated from one another must differ by at least 15%.
 Spreadsheet/Presentation Graphics
 Most presentation programs (Excel, PowerPoint, Freelance) produce data that cannot be stored in an EPS format. Therefore graphics produced by these programs cannot be used for print.
 Halftone Illustrations
 Black & white and color illustrations should be saved in TIFF format.
 Illustrations should be created using Adobe Photoshop whenever possible.

 Scans*

 Scanned reproductions of black and white photographs should be provided as 300 ppi TIFF files.
 Scanned color illustrations should be provided as TIFF files scanned at a minimum of 300 ppi with a 24-bit color depth.
 Line art should be provided as TIFF files at 600 ppi.

 * We do prefer having the original art as our printers have drum scanners which allow for better reproduction of critical medical halftones.

 Graphics from Videos

 Separate files should be prepared for frames from a video that are to be printed in the journal. When preparing these files you should follow the same rules as listed under Halftone Illustrations.
 Guidelines for Electronically Produced Illustrations for ONLINE
 Video
 Quicktime (.mov) is the preferred format, but .rm, .avi, .mpg, etc. are acceptable.
 No video file should be larger than 2MB. To decrease the size of your file, consider changing one or more of the following variables: frame speed, number of colors/greys, viewing size (in pixels), or compression. Video is subject to Editorial review and approval.

Editorial Board
Editor in Chief Ueli Maurer Department of Computer Science ETH Zürich CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland maurer@inf.ethz.ch Editorial Board Donald Beaver CertCo, Inc. 55 Broad St., Ste. 22 New York, NY 10004, USA beaverd@certco.com
Mihir Bellare Department of Computer Science and Engineering Mail Code 0114 University of California at San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093, USA mihir@cs.uscd.edu
Eli Biham Computer Science Department Technion Haifa 32000, Israel biham@cs.technion.ac.il
Dan Boneh Computer Science Department Gates 475 Stanford, CA 94305-9045, USA dabo@cs.stanford.edu
Johannes Buchmann Fachbereich Informatik Technische Universität Darmstadt Alexanderstrasse 10 D-64283 Darmstadt, Germany buchmann@cdc.informatik.th-darmstadt.de
Ran Canetti IBM Research 30 Saw Mill River Road Hawthorne, NY 10532, USA canetti@watson.ibm.com
Ronald Cramer BRICS and Department of Computer Science Aarhus University Ny Munkegade 116 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark cramer@brics.dk
Cynthia Dwork Microsoft Silicon Valley Research Center 1065 L'Avenida Mountain View, CA 94043, USA dwork@microsoft.com
Matthew Franklin Department of Computer Science University of California, Davis One Shields Avenue Davis, CA 95616-8562, USA franklin@cs.ucdavis.edu
Oded Goldreich Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics Weizmann Institute of Science Rehovot 76100, Israel oded@wisdom.weizmann.ac.il
Arjen K. Lenstra Citibank, N.A. 1 North Gate Road Mendham, NJ 07945-3104, USA arjen.lenstra@citicorp.com
Moni Naor Room 248, Ziskind Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics Weizmann Institute of Science Rehovot 76100, Israel naor@wisdom.weizmann.ac.il
Bart Preneel Department of Electrical Engineering Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Kardinaal Mercierlaan 94 B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium bart.preneel@esat.kuleuven.ac.be
Kazue Sako NEC Laboratories 4-1-1 Miyazaki Miyamae Kawasaki 216-8555, Japan k-sako@ab.jp.nec.com
Moti Yung CertCo Inc. Regular Mail Address: 450 S. W. Mudd Building Computer Science Department Columbia University 1214 Amsterdam Avenue New York, NY 10027-7003, USA moti@cs.columbia.edu
Last change: 19 March, 2003 Email: link@springer-ny.com ?Springer-Verlag New York, Inc. 1996-2003
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