Dachman-Soled Wins NSF Career Award

Dachman-Soled Wins NSF Career Award

Dachman-Soled Wins NSF Career Award

Professor Dana Dachman-Soled
Professor Dana Dachman-Soled

Professor Dana Dachman-Soled (ECE/UMIACS) is the recipient of a 2015 National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award for Non-Black-Box Cryptography: Defending Against and Benefiting from Access to Code. The five-year award is worth $495,000.

Regarding the award, Dachman-Soled said, “I am very excited to receive the NSF Faculty Early Career award. This grant will allow me to support and develop my research and educational agenda.  I am looking forward to using this opportunity to make an impact in my field.”

Dachman-Soled is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, part of the A. James Clark School of Engineering at the University of Maryland. Her research interests include cryptography, complexity theory and security. Broadly, she has interests in cryptography including security against physical attacks, secure multiparty computation, and black-box complexity. She is also interested in property testing of Boolean functions and cryptographic hardness of learning.

Dachman-Soled is also affiliated with the Maryland Cybersecurity Center, UMIACS, and Computer Science. Prior to joining the University of Maryland, Dachman-Soled  spent two years at Microsoft Research New England. She completed her Ph.D. at Columbia University under the supervision of Prof. Tal Malkin.

About this research
Dachman-Soled’s research focuses on developing cryptosystems that remain secure even when implemented on devices that are susceptible to side-channel attacks—attacks that depend on the particular algorithm and/or the specific implementation employed such as timing or fault-injection attacks. In practice, many cryptosystems can be completely reverse engineered via such attacks.  Her approach is to develop new cryptosystems that offer provable security against large classes of side-channel attacks, potentially even against attacks that are not yet known.

The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program offers the NSF’s most prestigious awards in support of junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars through outstanding research, excellent education and the integration of education and research within the context of the mission of their organizations.

Related Articles:
Alumna Rose Faghih Adapts Smartwatches to Deliver Information About Brain States
Larsson Receives NSF CAREER Award
Dutta to receive NSF CAREER Award
Dutt is PI on NSF-Funded Quantum Research Grant
Erika Moore Receives NSF CAREER Award
UMD’s Tubaldi Wins NSF CAREER Award
Five BIOE Students & Alumni Named NSF Graduate Research Fellows
Reimagining Cryptography in a Post-Quantum World
NSF RINGS: Harnessing the Complexity of Modern Electromagnetic Environments for Resilient Wireless Communications
Allison Reilly Wins NSF CAREER Award

March 27, 2015


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Two BIOE Students Receive MPower Graduate Fellowships

Three UMD Students Receive SAMPE Leadership Awards

International Energy Cooperation Center Established at University of Maryland

Maryland Researchers Awarded $1.5 Million to Pioneer Batteries for Electric Rail and Maritime Transportation

Researcher’s Pacific Dive Spurred Innovations in Robotics with Machine Intelligence to Create Biodegradable Plastic Substitutes

UMD Professor and Alum Among 2024 VFS Awardees

Agents of Positive Change: Highlighting Women Maryland Engineers

Celebrating Women in Aerospace Engineering: Christine Hartzell

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar