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Computational indistinguishability is a concept from theoretical computer science and cryptography that describes a relationship between two probability distributions or random variables. Two distributions \( P \) and \( Q \) are said to be computationally indistinguishable if no polynomial-time adversary (or algorithm) can distinguish between them with a significant advantage, that is, if every probabilistic polynomial-time algorithm produces similar outputs when given samples from either distribution.

Ancestors (6)

  1. Algorithmic information theory
  2. Algorithms
  3. Applied mathematics
  4. Fields of mathematics
  5. Mathematics
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