@inproceedings{pettersson-megyesi-2019-matching,
title = "Matching Keys and Encrypted Manuscripts",
author = "Pettersson, Eva and
Megyesi, Beata",
editor = "Hartmann, Mareike and
Plank, Barbara",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics",
month = sep # "{--}" # oct,
year = "2019",
address = "Turku, Finland",
publisher = {Link{\"o}ping University Electronic Press},
url = "https://aclanthology.org/W19-6126",
pages = "253--261",
abstract = "Historical cryptology is the study of historical encrypted messages aiming at their decryption by analyzing the mathematical, linguistic and other coding patterns and their historical context. In libraries and archives we can find quite a lot of ciphers, as well as keys describing the method used to transform the plaintext message into a ciphertext. In this paper, we present work on automatically mapping keys to ciphers to reconstruct the original plaintext message, and use language models generated from historical texts to guess the underlying plaintext language.",
}
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<abstract>Historical cryptology is the study of historical encrypted messages aiming at their decryption by analyzing the mathematical, linguistic and other coding patterns and their historical context. In libraries and archives we can find quite a lot of ciphers, as well as keys describing the method used to transform the plaintext message into a ciphertext. In this paper, we present work on automatically mapping keys to ciphers to reconstruct the original plaintext message, and use language models generated from historical texts to guess the underlying plaintext language.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Matching Keys and Encrypted Manuscripts
%A Pettersson, Eva
%A Megyesi, Beata
%Y Hartmann, Mareike
%Y Plank, Barbara
%S Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics
%D 2019
%8 sep–oct
%I Linköping University Electronic Press
%C Turku, Finland
%F pettersson-megyesi-2019-matching
%X Historical cryptology is the study of historical encrypted messages aiming at their decryption by analyzing the mathematical, linguistic and other coding patterns and their historical context. In libraries and archives we can find quite a lot of ciphers, as well as keys describing the method used to transform the plaintext message into a ciphertext. In this paper, we present work on automatically mapping keys to ciphers to reconstruct the original plaintext message, and use language models generated from historical texts to guess the underlying plaintext language.
%U https://aclanthology.org/W19-6126
%P 253-261
Markdown (Informal)
[Matching Keys and Encrypted Manuscripts](https://aclanthology.org/W19-6126) (Pettersson & Megyesi, NoDaLiDa 2019)
ACL
- Eva Pettersson and Beata Megyesi. 2019. Matching Keys and Encrypted Manuscripts. In Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics, pages 253–261, Turku, Finland. Linköping University Electronic Press.