Three doctoral degree students, Jhaell Jimenez, Katrina Parsom, and Michelle Buslon (all Computer Science) were invited to present their research at the Silicon Valley Cybersecurity Conference (SVCC). The conference, supported by the Silicon Valley Cybersecurity Institute (SVCSI) and taking place in early June, brought together researchers, practitioners, educators, underrepresented communities and others interested in the latest advances in cybersecurity, privacy, data protection, networking, cloud computing, software, and emerging technologies.
All three work under Juyeon Jo and Yoohwan Kim (both Computer Science), the executive director and associate executive director of the Nevada Institute of Cybersecurity (NIC) at UNLV.
Papers can be accessed on the SVCC website under Camera-Ready Papers.
“Reducing Cognitive Load in Packet Analysis: A Plain-Language Translation Framework for Novice Security Analysts”
Authors: Jhaell Jimenez, Yoohwan Kim, and JuYeon Jo (Research Track, #0537)
“Integrating Post-Quantum Cryptography into a CDN-Style PKI: Design, Trade-offs, and an Experimental Baseline”
Authors: Katrina Parsom, Yoohwan Kim, and JuYeon Jo (Research Track, #0632)
“A Comparative Analysis of LLMs for BOM Processing”
Authors: Michelle Buslon, Sean Breckling (NNSS), Yoohwan Kim, and JuYeon Jo (AI Security Workshop, #8799)
This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Environmental Management. UNLV is a subrecipient of the project Consortium on National Critical Infrastructure Security for Environmental Management (CONCISE-EM) led by the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA)