Background and Definition
A Boolean function
is said to be plateaued if its Walsh transform takes at most three distinct values, viz. 0 and Β±π for some positive ineger π called the amplitude of π.
This notion can be naturally extended to vectorial Boolean functions by applying it to each component. More precisely, if πΉ is an (π,π)-function, we say that πΉ is plateaued if all its component functions π’β
πΉ for π’β 0 are plateaued. If all of the component functions are plateaued and have the same amplitude, we say that πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude.
The characterization by means of the derivatives below suggests the following definition: a v.B.f. πΉ is said to be strongly-plateuaed if, for every π and every π£, the size of the set
does not depend on π₯, or, equivalently, the size of the set
does not depend on π₯.
Equivalence relations
The class of functions that are plateaued with single amplitude is CCZ-invariant.
The class of plateaued functions is only EA-invariant.
Relations to other classes of functions
All bent and semi-bent Boolean functions are plateaued.
Any vectorial AB function is plateaued with single amplitude.
Constructions of Boolean plateaued functions
Primary constructons
Generalization of the Maiorana-MacFarland Functions [1]
The Maiorana-MacFarland class of bent functions can be generalized into the class of functions
of the form

for
, where π and π are any positive integers, π = π + π ,
is arbitrary and
is any Boolean function.
The Walsh transform of
takes the value

at (π,π). If π is injective, resp. takes each value in its image set two times, then
is plateaued of amplitude 2π, resp. 2π+1.
Characterization of Plateaued Functions [2]
Characterization by the Derivatives
Using the fact that a Boolean function π is plateaued if and only if the expression
does not depend on
, one can derive the following characterization.
Let πΉ be an (π,π)-function. Then:
- πΉ is plateuaed if and only if, for every
, the size of the set

does not depend on
;
- πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if the size of the set depends neither on
, nor on
for
.
Moreover:
- for every πΉ, the value distribution of
equals that of
when
ranges over
;
- if two plateaued functions πΉ,πΊ have the same distribution, then all of their component functions
have the same amplitude.
Power Functions
Let
. Then, for every $v,x,\lambda \in \mathbb{F}_{2^n}</math> with
, we have

Then:
- πΉ is plateaued if and only if, for every
, we have

- πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if the size above does not, in addition, depend on
.
Functions with Unbalanced Components
Let πΉ be an (π,π)-function. Then πΉ is plateuaed with all components unbalanced if and only if, for every
, we have

Moreover, πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if this value does not, in addition, depend on
for
.
Strongly-Plateaued Functions
A Boolean function is strongly-plateaued if and only if its partially-bent. A v.B.f. is strongly-plateaued if and only if all of its component functions are partially-bent. In particular, bent and quadratic Boolean and vectorial functions are strongly-plateaued.
The image set
of any derivative of a strongly-plateaued function
is an affine space.
Characterization by the Auto-Correlation Functions
Recall that the autocorrelation function of a Boolean function
is defined as
.
An π-variable Boolean function π is plateaued if and only if, for every
, we have

An (π,π)-function πΉ is plateaued if and only if, for every
, we have

Furthermore, πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if, for every
, we have

Alternatively, πΉ is plateuaed if and only if, for every
, we have

Characterization by the Means of the Power Moments of the Walsh Transform
First Characterization
A Boolean function
is plateuaed if and only if, for every
, we have

An (π,π)-function πΉ is plateuaed if and only if for every
and
, we have

Furthermore, πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if, in addition, the sum
does not depend on
for
.
Second Characterization
A Boolean function
is plateuaed if and only if, for every
, we have

An (π,π)-function πΉ is plateuaed if and only if, for every
and every
, we have

Moreover, πΉ is plateaued with single amplitude if and only if the two sums above do not depend on π’ for
.
Third Characterization
Any Boolean function π in
variables satisfies

with equality if and only if π is plateuaed.
Any (π,π)-function πΉ satisfies

with equality if and only if πΉ is plateuaed.
In addition, every (π,π)-function satisfies

with equality if and only if πΉ is plateuaed.
Characterization of APN among Plateaued Functions
Characterization by the Derivatives
One very useful property of quadratic functions which extends to plateaued functions is that it suffices to consider the number of solutions to the differential equation
in order to decided the APN-ness of a given function πΉ. More precisely, a plateuaed (π,π) function πΉ is APN if and only if the equation

has at most two solutions for any
.
Characterization by the Walsh Transform
Suppose πΉ is a plateaued (π,π) function with
. Then πΉ is APN if and only if

or, equivalently,

Any (π,π)-function satisfies the inequality

with equality if and only if πΉ is APN plateaued.
If we denote by
the amplitude of the component function
of a given plateuaed function
, then πΉ is APN if and only if

Functions with Unbalanced Components
Let πΉ be an (π,π)-plateaued function with all components unbalanced. Then

with equality if and only if πΉ is APN.
- β Camion P, Carlet C, Charpin P, Sendrier N. On Correlation-immune functions. InAdvances in CryptologyβCRYPTOβ91 1992 (pp. 86-100). Springer Berlin/Heidelberg.
- β Carlet C. Boolean and vectorial plateaued functions and APN functions. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 2015 Nov;61(11):6272-89.