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KALwEN: a new practical and interoperable key management scheme for body sensor networks
Author(s) -
Law Yee Wei,
Moniava Giorgi,
Gong Zheng,
Hartel Pieter,
Palaniswami Marimuthu
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
security and communication networks
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.446
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1939-0122
pISSN - 1939-0114
DOI - 10.1002/sec.256
Subject(s) - computer science , key management , key (lock) , wireless sensor network , unicast , secrecy , interoperability , scheme (mathematics) , computer network , rekeying , cryptography , computer security , trust management (information system) , distributed computing , multicast , world wide web , mathematical analysis , mathematics
Key management is the pillar of a security architecture. Body sensor networks (BSNs) pose several challenges–some inherited from wireless sensor networks (WSNs), some unique to themselves–that require a new key management scheme to be tailor‐made. The challenge is taken on, and the result is KALwEN, a new parameterized key management scheme that combines the best‐suited cryptographic techniques in a seamless framework. KALwEN is user‐friendly in the sense that it requires no expert knowledge of a user, and instead only requires a user to follow a simple set of instructions when bootstrapping or extending a network. One of KALwEN's key features is that it allows sensor devices from different manufacturers, which expectedly do not have any pre‐shared secret, to establish secure communications with each other. KALwEN is decentralized, such that it does not rely on the availability of a local processing unit (LPU). KALwEN supports secure global broadcast, local broadcast, and local (neighbor‐to‐neighbor) unicast, while preserving past key secrecy and future key secrecy (FKS). The fact that the cryptographic protocols of KALwEN have been formally verified also makes a convincing case. With both formal verification and experimental evaluation, our results should appeal to theorists and practitioners alike. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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