@Article{BarCho93,
author = "R. Bar-Yehuda and B. Chor and E. Kushilevitz and A. Orlitsky",
title = "Privacy, Additional Information, and Communication",
journal = "IEEE Transactions on Information Theory",
volume = "39",
number = "6",
pages = "1930--1943",
year = "1993",
abstract = "Two parties, each holding one input of a
two-variable function, communicate in order to determine the
value of the function. Each party wants to expose as little
of its input as possible to the other party. We prove
tight bounds on the minimum amount of information
about the individual inputs that must be revealed in
the computation of most functions and of some specific
ones, and show that a computation that reveals little
information about the individual inputs may require
many more message exchanges than a more revealing
computation.",
}