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Secret Sharing on Superconcentrator

Main:20 Pages
5 Figures
Bibliography:3 Pages
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Abstract

Using information inequalities, we prove any unrestricted arithmetic circuits computing the shares of any (t,n)(t, n)-threshold secret sharing scheme must satisfy some superconcentrator-like connection properties. In the reverse direction, we prove, when the underlying field is large enough, any graph satisfying these connection properties can be turned into a linear arithmetic circuit computing the shares of a (t,n)(t, n)-threshold secret sharing scheme. Specifically, nn shares can be computed by a linear arithmetic circuits with O(n)O(n) wires in depth O(α(t,n))O(\alpha(t, n)), where α(t,n)\alpha(t, n) is the two-parameter version of the inverse Ackermann function. For example, when nt2.5n \ge t^{2.5}, depth 22 would be enough; when ntlog2.5tn \ge t \log^{2.5} t, depth 3 would be enough.

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