Research

National Science Experiment Coverage

Our National Science experiment was recently featured in the Straits Times, our national newspaper. More info here.

Skyhook article on the National Science Project

Skyhook is the localization service we use to determine locations of measurements taken in the National Science Experiment. They did a quick interview on the project with me.

First run of National Science Experiment underway

This week, the first run of the National Science Experiment started with about 15,000 sensor nodes distributed to schools all over Singapore.

SCy-Phy Site Online

We now have a website for the SCy-Phy group at SUTD, follow this link. We will use it to provide updates on our research projects, and the group members.

Challenges and Opportunities in Practical Industrial Control System Security Research

I willl visit the SVA group of Prof. Dieter Gollmann at TUHH. On August 20, 10.30am, I will give an invited talk with the title “Challenges and Opportunities in Practical Industrial Control System Security Research”.

Searching Google Scholar for institution publications/profiles

I recently discovered that you can also use Google scholar to search for all articles hosted by an institution, and all faculty members with a Scholar profile at that institution.

Google’s Security Conference/Journal ranking

An analysis of the Google Metrics for security venues.

Secure Water Treatment Testbed launched

SWaT, our testbed for security research on industrial control systems, was launched this week. SWaT faithfully replicates a water treatment system, including the physical process with pipes, tanks, filter, and chemical treatment.

New PhD Student: Hamid

Hamid Reza Ghaeini joined my group as PhD student in January. He earned his MSc from Tarbiat Modares University, Teheran.

National Experiment Grant accepted

Our national experiment proposal was announced by President Dr Tony Tan. This project is led by Prof. Erik Wilhelm of the EPD pillar at SUTD. The project aims to provide Singaporean school students with smart sensors that can be used for scientific experiments at school. In total, it will involve 250,000 students over the next three years.