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Securing Resource Constrained Wireless Networks
Speaker: Professor Yuguang "Michael" FANG University of Florida Research Foundation Professor Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Florida Title: "Securing Resource Constrained Wireless Networks" Date: Wednesday, 7 May 2008 Time: 3:00pm - 4:00pm Venue: Lecture Theatre E (Cheung On Tak Lecture Theatre) Chia-Wei Woo Academic Concourse, HKUST Abstract: Huge interest and demand on information superhighway (the future high-speed Internet access) have pressed various telecommunications research fronts and resulted in various kinds of wired or wireless network clouds of various administrative domains to enable the universal information access via inexpensive resource-constrained devices. Thus, the future trend will lead to a new form of Internet consisting of wired and wireless segments where resource-constrained devices such as palm pilots and sensors may become integral parts of the Internet rather than access-only platforms. Moreover, various kinds of applications over such heterogeneous networks may demand control actions to be taken over such networks in order to fulfill certain networking missions (such as sensing and actuation). One of the key design problems is the information assurance in such heterogeneous networks, particularly over wireless networks with resource-constrained devices. In this presentation, a novel approach to addressing the security issue is given. It will be demonstrated that the ID-based cryptography can be applied to effectively address various network security problems in the resource-constrained wireless networks. Recent research progress and future research challenges will be reported. ******************** Biography: Dr. Yuguang "Michael" Fang received a Ph.D degree in Systems and Control Engineering from Case Western Reserve University in January 1994 and a Ph.D degree in Electrical Computer Engineering from Boston University in May 1997. After one year with the University of Texas at Dallas as a Visiting Assistant Professor, he joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at New Jersey Institute of Technology as an Assistant Professor in 1998. In May 2000, he moved to the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at University of Florida as an Assistant Professor. He got early promotion to Associate Professor with tenure in August 2003, and then to Full Professor in August 2005. He holds a University of Florida Research Foundation Professorship from 2006-2009. He is currently a NSC Visiting Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering at the National Taiwan University. His research interests span many areas including wireless networks, mobile computing, mobile communications, wireless security, automatic control, and neural networks. He has published over 200 papers in refereed professional journals and conferences. He received the National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Award in 2001, the Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award in 2002, and the 2001 CAST Academic Excellence Award from the Chinese Association for Science and Technology (CAST), USA. He has also received the Best Paper Award for his paper in the 14th IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols (ICNP'2006) and the IEEE TCGN Best Paper Award for the paper in the IEEE High-Speed Networks Symposium, IEEE Globecom'2002. Dr. Fang has actively engaged in many professional activities. He is a Fellow of IEEE and a member of ACM. He is an Editor for several journals including IEEE Transactions on Communications, IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, IEEE Wireless Communications Magazines, ACM Wireless Networks, and Journal of Computer Science and Technology. He was an editor for IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing and currently serves on its Steering Committee. He served as the Vice-Chair for Technical Program Committee of IEEE INFOCOM'05 and a member of Technical Program Committee for many conferences including ACM Mobihoc'08, ACM MobiCom'01, IEEE ICDCS'04 and IEEE INFOCOM (1998, 2000, 2003-2009).