Two ASU researchers named 2019 IEEE Fellows

Dragica Vasileska and Yanchao Zhang were selected among the IEEE’s most prestigious members for their significant accomplishments in their field.

Electrical engineering researchers are constantly improving the technologies that impact our everyday lives. Each year, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, better known as IEEE, recognizes members who have made significant accomplishments in their field.

The IEEE Board of Directors selects from among less than one-tenth of one percent of the most prestigious IEEE members to be elevated to the distinction of Fellow. This year, that top tier included two faculty members in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University.

Professor Dragica Vasileska was selected for her contributions to computational electronics and simulation of nanoscale devices. Professor Yanchao Zhang earned the distinction for his contributions to wireless and mobile security.

These two faculty members in the School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering, one of the six Fulton Schools, join nearly 300 prominent researchers from around the world in the 2019 class of Fellows.

Big impacts at the nanoscale

Vasileska is also active in advancing the educational resources for her field with nanoHUB, the science gateway of the Network for Computational Nanotechnology, first sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

Representing ASU, she is the third most prolific contributor of educational material and simulation tools on nanoHUB. Her most-cited tool on the gateway is SCHRED. ABACUS and AQME are the most popular tool-based curricula on the platform, providing a new mode of teaching students how devices work.

“With Professor Gerhard Klimeck [from Purdue University] I created the concept of tools-based curricula — a set of tools supplemented with presentation slides, problems, challenge exercises, and reading material,” Vasileska says.

She has more than 180 publications in scientific journals and more than 200 conference proceedings refereed papers. She has co-authored six books and 25 book chapters and has delivered numerous invited talks about her work.

In 1998, Vasileska received an NSF CAREER Award to support her research. In addition, students who have contributed to her research have earned numerous best poster and best paper awards over the years.

Securing a vulnerable, connected world

Our connected devices — smartphones, tablets, wearables and more — are increasingly storing private information. This makes hacking the devices alluring to malicious actors looking to exploit lapses in security. Zhang’s mission to secure potential vulnerabilities from cyberattack is no easy feat.

“Wireless and mobile devices are much more difficult to safeguard than regular computers,” Zhang says. “Our group is dedicated to discovering new security and privacy threats in all kinds of wireless and mobile systems and also coming up with innovative countermeasures.”

Zhang explores different ways mobile connected devices are difficult to secure. Battery-powered devices have tight resource constraints, so security measures must have a small footprint. Small devices also have physical insecurities as they can be easily lost or stolen.

On the wireless signal side, connected devices hop on and off various wireless networks that each pose their own security challenges, and open wireless links are subject to eavesdropping and jamming.

Even if these vulnerabilities are secured, “hackers’ capabilities also grow over time, so there is an endless race between hackers and security researchers,” Zhang says.

To get ahead of hackers, Zhang explores a combination of theoretical and experimental methods to combat security and privacy threats in wireless and mobile systems — especially by promoting proactive security design, or, as Zhang explains, “making security and privacy issues essential design components of future wireless and mobile systems from the beginning.”

Zhang has made important contributions to the security and privacy of emerging wireless networks, mobile crowdsourcing and sensing, the internet of things and social networking, as well as wireless and mobile systems for people with disabilities, wearable computing, cloud and edge computing, big data analytics, wireless and mobile health monitoring and artificial intelligence.

His recent contributions include the proposal of a novel face authentication framework for mobile devices, a new approach to make two-factor authentication systems such Duo Mobile more usable and secure, and a novel framework for sharing social network information in a verifiable and privacy-preserving fashion. Four provisional patents have been filed for these innovations through ASU Skysong Innovations. In addition, his group unveiled new threats in which hackers can infer the passwords of mobile device users from device vibrations and users’ eye movement, the results of which were published in the top-tier venues such as the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy.

Zhang has published 45 conference papers, 40 journal and magazine articles and three book chapters; his work has been cited more than 6,400 times in papers by other researchers.

In 2009, Zhang received an NSF CAREER award to support his research, which has helped lead to five provisional patent submissions related to his wireless and mobile security research through ASU Skysong Innovations, a technology transfer accelerator.

Vasileska and Zhang join 36 faculty members in the Fulton Schools who have been named IEEE Fellows.

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Monique Clement

This article was authored by a past contributor to Full Circle/ASU Engineering News.

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