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      ‘Fingerprinting’ documents and packaging

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          Abstract

          We have found that almost all paper documents, plastic cards and product packaging contain a unique physical identity code formed from microscopic imperfections in the surface. This covert 'fingerprint' is intrinsic and virtually impossible to modify controllably. It can be rapidly read using a low-cost portable laser scanner. Most forms of document and branded-product fraud could be rendered obsolete by use of this code.

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          Most cited references6

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          Physical one-way functions.

          Modern cryptographic practice rests on the use of one-way functions, which are easy to evaluate but difficult to invert. Unfortunately, commonly used one-way functions are either based on unproven conjectures or have known vulnerabilities. We show that instead of relying on number theory, the mesoscopic physics of coherent transport through a disordered medium can be used to allocate and authenticate unique identifiers by physically reducing the medium's microstructure to a fixed-length string of binary digits. These physical one-way functions are inexpensive to fabricate, prohibitively difficult to duplicate, admit no compact mathematical representation, and are intrinsically tamper-resistant. We provide an authentication protocol based on the enormous address space that is a principal characteristic of physical one-way functions.
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            Capillary Blood Flow Monitoring Using Laser Speckle Contrast Analysis (LASCA).

            Coherent light scattered from an ensemble of moving scatterers produces a time-varying speckle pattern. The intensity fluctuations observed in a single speckle can be regarded either as a time-varying interference effect or as a Doppler beating effect. Techniques based on each of these approaches have been developed to analyze the fluctuations in an attempt to measure the velocities of the scatterers. Most of these methods measure the temporal statistics of the intensity fluctuations in a single speckle, i.e., at a single point. If a map of the velocity distribution is required, some form of scanning must be introduced. One way of avoiding the need to scan is to make use of the spatial statistics of time-integrated speckle. This is the basis of a technique, already described in the literature, called laser speckle contrast analysis (LASCA). In this article, we present a brief review of the theory linking the intensity fluctuations to the velocity and of the various techniques that have been proposed to measure them. We then describe the present configuration of our LASCA technique and describe some recent developments in our search for a real-time, noninvasive, full-field technique for visualizing capillary blood flow. © 1999 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.
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              Roughness measurement of metallic surfaces based on the laser speckle contrast method

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature
                Nature
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                July 28 2005
                July 27 2005
                July 28 2005
                : 436
                : 7050
                : 475
                Article
                10.1038/436475a
                16049465
                6dc2b361-a96d-423e-83ea-f3a5b12b288d
                © 2005

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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