Isomorphic unordered labeled trees up to substitution ciphering
Given two messages - as linear sequences of letters, it is immediate to determine whether one can be transformed into the other by simple substitution cipher of the letters. On the other hand, if the letters are carried as labels on nodes of topologically isomorphic unordered trees, determining if a substitution exists is referred to as marked tree isomorphism problem in the literature and has been show to be as hard as graph isomorphism [Booth, 1979]. While the left-to-right direction provides the cipher of letters in the case of linear messages, if the messages are carried by unordered trees, the cipher is given by a tree isomorphism. The number of isomorphisms between two trees is roughly exponential in the size of the trees, which makes the problem of finding a cipher difficult by exhaustive search. This paper presents a method that aims to break the combinatorics of the isomorphisms search space. We show that in a linear time (in the size of the trees), we reduce the cardinality of this space by an exponential factor on average.
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-79987-8_27