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Current
Center Faculty and Staff
The following faculty
have expressed interest in working with the SAI. We are strongly
interested in participation of and collaboration with additional
faculty working in areas related to System Assurance.
See
Faculty Interests and Faculty
Paragraphs
Faculty
ENGINEERING
AND COMPUTER SCIENCE - INFORMATION
STUDIES - MAXWELL &
NEWHOUSE
ENGINEERING
AND COMPUTER SCIENCE
Dr.
Howard Blair [blair@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Blair is an Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering &
Computer Science at Syracuse University. He received his Ph.D. from
Syracuse University in 1980. His research interests linclude Logic
in Computer Science, Knowledge Representation, and Complex Systems.
Dr.
Steve Chapin [chapin@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Steve Chapin is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Syracuse University.
He received his Ph.D. from Purdue University in the area of distributed
computing, where he worked under the direction of Eugene Spafford
and was an original member of the COAST laboratory. His research
interests are in the broad area of distributed systems, including
distributed operating systems, metacomputing, distributed resource
management, networking, and security. Prior to joining Syracuse
University, Dr. Chapin was on the faculty at the University of Virginia,
where he was a co-investigator on the Legion metacomputing project.
Dr.
Shiu-Kai Chin [skchin@syr.edu]
Dr. Shiu-Kai Chin is a Professor in the Department of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science. He is Director of the NY State
Center for Advanced Technology in Computer Applications and Software
Engineering (CASE). He is a Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor
for Teaching Excellence¾Syracuse University’s highest award for
teaching. His areas of expertise include high-assurance design methods
for very large-scale integrated (VLSI) circuits and software, computer-aided
design, and information security. Prior to joining Syracuse University,
Dr. Chin was at General Electric for eleven years. At GE he was
a senior engineer and program manager. From 1995 to 1999, Dr. Chin
was a member of the Defensive Information Warfare Branch of the
Air Force Research Laboratory’s Rome Research Site. His duties included
fundamental and applied research in high-confidence system design
and helping organize research programs in network security and computer
forensics. He is on the Advisory Board of the Computer Forensics
Research and Development Center at Utica College.
Dr.
Wenliang (Kevin) Du [wedu@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Kevin
Du is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science. He received his Ph.D. degree in 2001 from
Purdue University in the area of computer and information security,
where he worked in the Center for Education and Research in Information
Assurance and Security (CERIAS). His research interests include
a broad range of security issues in information, system and network
security.
Dr.
Kamal Jabbour [jabbour@syr.edu]
Dr. Kamal Jabbour is Director of the Central New York Advanced Course
in Engineering, and an Associate Professor of Computer Engineering
at Syracuse University. He is currently on assignment to the Defensive
Information Warfare Branch of the Air Force Research Lab in Rome,
NY. He received the Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from The University
of Salford, England, in 1982. His areas of expertise include Computer
Networks and Computer Architecture. He received the General Electric
Award for Teaching Excellence in 1987, and the Outstanding Undergraduate
Instructor Award in 1997 from the Gamma Eta Chapter of Eta Kappa
Nu, the International Honor Society for Electrical Engineers.
Dr. Nazanin Mansouri
[namansou@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Mansouri is an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering
& Computer Science at Syracuse University. She received her Ph.D.
from the University of Cincinnati in 2000. Her research interests
inlcude VLSI Design and CAD, High-Level Synthesis, Logic Systhesis,
Formal Methods, Reconfigurable Computing, and Rapid Prototyping.
Dr.
Roman Markowski [roman@webwisdom.com]
Dr. Roman Markowski is a Research Professor in the Department of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and IS Manager in the
Center for Systems Assurance. Roman also holds two other management
positions, the first at WebWisdom.com, Inc (dba Collabworx), and
the second in Red Team Consulting Company, LLC. At the same time
Roman teaches graduate courses at Syracuse University focused on
Computer Network Design, Network Security and E-commerce Infrastructures.
Roman holds MSc in theoretical astrophysics and PhD in computational
solid-state physics from the Jagellonian University, Cracow, Poland,
where he worked as a Director of the University Computer Center.
Roman joined Syracuse University in 1993.
Dr.
Susan Older, Education Director [sueo@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Susan Older is an Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science. She graduated from Carnegie Mellon's
School of Computer Science with a Ph.D. in Pure and Applied Logic
in 1996. Her research areas include the semantics of concurrency
and mobility, logics of programs, security, and formal methods.
Dr.
Lisa Osadciw [laosadci@syr.edu]
Dr. Osadciw is an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering
& Computer Science at Syracuse University. She received a Ph.D.
from the University of Rochester in 1998. Her research interests
include Spread Spectrum Signal Design, Wireless Communications and
Radar Systems, Radar Signal Processing, Multi-sensor Fusion Processing,
Digital Receivers, Adaptive and Statistical Signal Processing, and
Tracking.
Dr. Leonard Popyack
[Leonard.Popyack@rl.af.mil]
Dr. Popyack is a Research Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering
& Computer Science at Syracuse University. He received his Ph.D.
from Binghamton University in 1998. His research interests include
Watermarking, Steganography, Information Attack Detection, and Information
Security System Architectures.
Dr.
James Royer [royer@ecs.syr.edu]
Dr. Royer is a Professor of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
at Syracuse University. He received his Ph.D. from SUNY/Buffalo
in 1984. His research interests include Theory of the Computational
Complexity of Higher-Type Functionals, Structural Computational
Complexity Theory, Computational Learning Theory, and Biological
Computing.
Dr. Pramod Varshney
[varshney@syr.edu]
Mr. Pramod Varshney has been a professor of Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science at Syracuse University since 1976. He received
the B.S. degree in electrical engineering and computer science (with
highest honors), and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering
from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1972, 1974,
and 1976 respectively. At present, he is the research director of
The New York State Center for Advanced Technology in Computer Applications
and Software Engineering (CASE). His current research interests
are in distributed sensor networks and data fusion, detection and
estimation theory, wireless communications, image processing, radar
signal processing and parallel algorithms.
INFORMATION
STUDIES
Dr.
Scott Bernard [sabernar@syr.edu]
Scott Bernard is an Assistant Professor of Information Studies
and the Director of Graduate Programs in Washington DC. He
joined the faculty of Syracuse University's School of Information Studies
in 1999 and has developed and taught courses in Enterprise Architecture;
IT Security Architecture; and Public and Private Sector Chief Information
Officers.
Dr. Bernard's areas of research include IT-related leadership, policy
development, strategic planning, enterprise architecture, security
architecture, and capital planning. In 2004, Dr. Bernard wrote the first textbook on enterprise
architecture, which is now in use at universities around the world.
Dr. Bernard is also a former career naval aviator who served on
aircraft carriers and with shore squadrons, led IT programs, and was
the Director of Network Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the
Pentagon.
Lee
W. McKnight [lmcknigh@syr.edu]
Lee W. McKnight is an Associate Professor in the School of Information
Studies, Syracuse University; a Visiting Professor of Computer Science
at Tufts University; a Research Affiliate of the Program on Internet
and Telecoms Convergence at MIT, which he founded in 1996; and President
of Marengo Research, a consultancy.
McKnight
currently teaches ‘Telecommunications and Information Policy’
at Syracuse University. His research interests span policy, economic,
business and technical aspects of the emerging global information
economy. In addition to many peer-reviewed journal articles in technical
and policy journals, his work includes the co-authored and co-edited
books, all published by MIT Press, ‘Internet Telephony’
(2001) ‘Creative Destruction: Business Survival Strategies
in the Global Internet Economy’ (2001, 2002, Japanese translation
by Toyo Kezai 2003), ‘Internet Economics’ (1997, 1998),
and ‘The Gordian Knot: Political Gridlock on the Information
Highway’ (1997, 1999); McKnight’s next book ‘Internet
Service. Quality of Service in Networks and Markets’ is also
forthcoming in 2004 from MIT Press.
Liz
Liddy [liddy@syr.edu]
Liz Liddy teaches courses in Natural Language Processing, Information
Retrieval, and Data Mining. She frequently serves as the Academic
Supervisor for graduate internships. In September 1999, Liz was
named Director of Syracuse University's Center for Natural Language
Processing. The Center's mission is to advance the development of
human-like language understanding software capabilities for government,
commercial, and consumer applications. Liz's main research focus
is Natural Language Processing (NLP), an area of research in which
she has been active since her dissertation research which culminated
in her award winning dissertation in 1988, one of the first to prove
the utility of NLP for Information Science. Since that time Liz
has led 30 research projects, all based on the use of NLP for improved
information access and analytics.
Dave
Molta [djmolta@syr.edu]
As Assistant Professor of Information Studies at Syracuse University,
Dave Molta teaches classes on information technology and information
systems, drawing on over 15 years of experience in managing computer
and network systems. Molta also holds two other positions, the first
as Senior Technology Editor with Network Computing magazine, and
the second as Director of Syracuse University's Center for Emerging
Network Technologies (CENT). He received his Bachelors degree in
education from the State University of New York at Oswego before
earning a Masters Degree in Public Administration at the University
of North Texas.
Peter Morrissey
[ppmorris@syr.edu]
Dr.
Milton Mueller [mueller@syr.edu]
Milton Mueller teaches and does research on telecommunications and
information policy. He uses the theoretical tools of property rights
analysis, institutional economics and historical analysis. He has
a longstanding interest in the history of communication technologies
and has recently begun to focus on international governance and
institutions. Mueller received the Ph.D. from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1989. Mueller's most recent book is Ruling the Root:
Internet Governance and the Taming of Cyberspace (MIT Press, 2002).
He has also published books and scholarly journal articles on telecommunications
development in China, digital convergence, and numerous research
papers on radio spectrum property rights, interconnection, and telecommunications
liberalization.
Dr.
Joon Park [jspark@syr.edu]
Dr.
Park is an assistant professor at the School of Information Studies
at Syracuse University in New York. Currently, he is a member of
the university's Security Assurance Institute (SAI) and the New
York State Center for Advanced Technology in Computer Applications
and Software Engineering (CASE). His primary research activities
lie in information security and its applications. His current research
areas are access control, metadata security, survivability, PKI,
grid computing security, spam emails, middleware security, and wireless
security. Before he joined the school, he worked for the US Naval
Research Laboratory (NRL)'s Center for High Assurance Computer Systems
(CHACS) via ITT Industries as Principal InfoSec Scientist (1999-2002).
Dr.
Jeffrey Stanton [jmstanto@syr.edu]
Dr. Jeffrey Stanton
(University of Connecticut, 1997) is an assistant professor in the
School of Information Studies at Syracuse University. Dr. Stanton's
research focuses on the intersection of organizational behavior
and technology, with the most recent projects examining how organizational
behavior affects information security in organizations. His work
has been published in top behavioral science journals, such as the
Journal of Applied Psychology, Personnel Psychology, and Human Performance.
Dr. Stanton's background includes extensive non-academic experience
including Applied Psychological Techniques, HRStrategies, Inc.,
and the Connecticut Department of Mental Health.
MAXWELL
& NEWHOUSE
Dr.
Jongwoo Han [jonghan@maxwell.syr.edu]
Dr. Han currently teaches two courses (PSC361 - Politics
in the Cyber Age and PSC300 - Contemporary Issues in the Information
Age) in the Department of Political Science of the Maxwell School.
He is responsible for several projects including the Information
and Computing Technology Group’s Speaker Series on the Impact
of the Information Technology Revolution upon Governance and Civil
Society; the Information Technology, Policy, and Management Certificate
Program which is certified by the State of New York; and the Ambassador
Pyo Wook Han Lecture Series on Korean/U.S. Affairs sponsored by
the Korea Foundation and Lockheed Martin. Dr. Han also serves as
an Associate Project Director for IT Research Collaboration between
Kim Chaek University of Technology (DPRK) and Syracuse University.
He is published in well known journals such as International Studies
Quarterly and the World Bank’s Business Briefing. His research
interests are the fields of e-Government, IT policy evaluation,
the impact of the Internet on social capital, and trustworthiness
in networked information systems.
Dr. Han is from Republic of Korea. He holds a B.A. from Yonsei University
and received his Ph.D. from Syracuse University.
Pat
Longstaff [phlongst@syr.edu]
Longstaff is an educator and analyst specializing in the business
and public policy issues affecting the communications industry in
the US and internationally. Her teaching assignments at Newhouse
include classes on current trends in the communications industry,
global communication issues and communications law/policy. She is
also a Research Associate at Harvard University's Center for Information
Policy Research where she works on issues of global communications
policy.
In addition to a law degree and a master's degree in mass communication
form the University of Iowa, she received a Master of Public Administration
degree from Harvard in 1994. She has also received extensive training
in business management, finance, and marketing. She practiced communication
and corporate law for 18 years, representing newspapers, broadcasters,
advertising agencies, and telephone companies. She is the co-author
of two books on communication law and has written for many mass
media and trade publications on her research topics.
Dr.
Stu Thorson [thorson@syr.edu]
Dr. Stu Thorson is a professor of International Relations and Political
Science. He is the Director of Information Technology. Thorson received
his Ph.D.from the University of Minnesota in 1972.
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