Individualized Cybersecurity Research Mentoring (iMentor) Workshop

Panelists

Bhavani Thuraisingham


Professor
Department of Computer Science
The University of Texas at Dallas


Bio:

Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham is the Louis A. Beecherl, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Computer Science and the Executive Director of the Cyber Security Research and Education Institute at the University of Texas at Dallas. She is also a visiting Senior Research Fellow at Kings College, University of London and a Fellow of the ACM, IEEE, and the AAAS. She has received several awards including the IEEE CS 1997 Technical Achievement Award, ACM SIGSAC 2010 Outstanding Contributions Award, and the ACM SACMAT 10 Year Test of Time Award. She has worked in industry (Honeywell), federal laboratory (MITRE), US government (NSF) and her work has resulted in 120 journal articles, 250 conference papers, 130 keynote and featured addresses, six US patents, fifteen books as well as technology transfer. She received her PhD from the University of Wales, Swansea, UK, and the prestigious earned higher doctorate (D. Eng) from the University of Bristol, UK.

Indrakshi Ray


Professor
Department of Computer Science
Colorado State University


Bio:

Indrakshi Ray is a Professor in the Computer Science Department at Colorado State University. She has also been a visiting faculty at Air Force Research Laboratory, Naval Research Laboratory, and at INRIA, Rocquencourt, France. Prior to joining Colorado State, she was a faculty at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She obtained her Ph.D. from George Mason University under the joint supervision of Professor Sushil Jajodia and Professor Paul Ammann. Her Master's degree in Computer Science and Engineering is from Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India. Her Bachelor of Engineering degree in Computer Science and Technology is from B.E.College, Kolkata, India.

Dr. Ray's research interests include security and privacy, database systems, e-commerce and formal methods in software engineering. She has published over a hundred technical papers in refereed journals and conference proceedings. She is on the editorial board of Computer Standards and Interfaces. She has been a guest editor of ACM Transactions of Information Systems Security and Journal of Digital Library. She has served in various capacities for journals and conferences. She was the Program Chair of ACM SACMAT 2006, Program Co-Chair for CSS 2013, ICISS 2013, IFIP DBSec 2003, and General Chair of SACMAT 2008. She has served on the program committees of various conferences including ACM SACMAT, DBSec, EDBT, ESORICS, and ICDE. She is a senior member of the IEEE and a senior member of ACM.

Yuan Tian


Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Virginia


Bio:

Dr. Tian is an Assistant Professor at University of Virginia. Her research focuses on developing novel technologies for the security, privacy, and safety of modern and emerging systems. She analyzes and models systems, drawing on program analysis, protocol analysis, machine learning, and human factors to understand the risks and develop systems that are secure and privacy-preserving.

Dr. Tian's work has been published in top-tier security conferences (such as Oakland, CCS, Usenix Security, and NDSS), and her work has generated real-world impact as countermeasures and design changes directly resulting from her research have been integrated into platforms (such as Android, Chrome, Firefox, and iOS).

Before joining UVa, she was a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University advised by Professor Patrick Tague. She interned at Microsoft Research (with Dr. Cormac Herley and Dr. Stuart Schechter), Facebook (with Security Infrastructure team), and Samsung Research (with Dr. Peng Ning).

Celine Irvene



Graduate Research Assistant
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Georgia Tech


Bio:

Celine Irvene is currently a PhD student at the Georgia Institute of Technology . Go Jackets! Her technical interests include software engineering, CPS security, and machine learning. She enjoys traveling, shopping, playing basketball, and learning new things.

Kevin Alejandro Roundy



Researcher
NortonLifeLock Research Group


Bio:

Dr. Kevin Roundy joined the research group after receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 2012.

As a graduate student, he developed tools by which obfuscated malware could be analyzed both with detailed static analysis techniques and dynamic instrumentation. Kevin has collaboratively developed broadly deployed threat-detection tools.

He has also worked in Endpoint Detection and Response on risk modeling. Additional areas of current interest include human-centric security and privacy paradigms. During his time with the company, Kevin has authored several research publications and patents. Kevin has a background in Machine Learning and Database systems, and did his undergraduate work at Brigham Young University.