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Mayrai Gindy and Yan Sun


New engineering professors launch security, transportation research

Most researchers are very careful with the results of their research to make sure they aren’t damaged or destroyed. Not Yan Sun. As soon as she builds her system, she attacks it and tries to break it. That’s because her research is aimed at improving computer network security.

“You have to attack the system to test its security to see how well it fares against hackers. And you have to assume an attacker knows your system well,” said Sun, one of two new assistant professors at URI’s College of Engineering.

Sun and Mayrai Gindy are just one semester removed from earning their doctorate degrees, and they are enthusiastically beginning their careers as teachers and researchers at URI. They are among five new URI faculty members hired through the National Science Foundation’s ADVANCE program, which is designed to boost the careers of women scientists and engineers.

“The ADVANCE program is partly what attracted me to URI,” said Gindy. “It allows my teaching load to be lighter in my first few years so I can focus on building my research program.”

Gindy, an assistant professor of civil engineering, is teaching a graduate course in structural engineering design this fall while establishing several research projects. Among her research interests are self-consolidating concrete, which is more viscous than conventional concrete, and the use of recycled materials in roadways.

“Shredded tires have been used in pavement for a while, but there has been limited research on the use of rubberized concrete, in particular the potential use of radial steel belts in recycled tires as structural reinforcement,” she explained.

One of Sun’s computer security research projects focuses on trust modeling and evaluation.

“Just like we must assess the trustworthiness of people in a social network, we also must evaluate the trustworthiness of ad hoc computer networks. In order to get something done, you often need to trust that the other computers or devices in the network haven’t been compromised,” said Sun.

Subjective trust measurements are used on the online auction site eBay to assess the trustworthiness of buyers and sellers. But Sun is modeling and evaluating more objective trust measurements based on mathematical formulas and what she calls “trust axioms.”

Once she creates a trust evaluation system she believes will satisfy the axioms, she will take on the role of a computer hacker and attack her system. Her goal is to make the trust evaluation system effective and resilient to attacks.

By Todd McLeish






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