DOCTORADO EN INGENIERÍA AUTOMÁTICA, ELECTRÓNICA Y DE TELECOMUNICACIÓN

Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería - Universidad de Sevilla

Esta semana se organiza un seminario. Se impartirá Jueves 25 de Octubre 10 a 14 en el aula 008. Para más información podéis preguntar al Prof. José María Maestre del Departamento de Sistema y Automática. Os recuerdo que:

- Los seminarios a los que asistáis los debéis incluir en el documento de actividades docentes del curso que viene.

- Se pasará lista, y podéis depués solicitarnos un certificado de asistencia para incluirlo en vuestro curriculum.

Seminario titulado "Game-Theoretic Approach to Security and Resilience of Cyber-Physical Systems” impartido por el profesor  Quanyan Zhu procedente de  la Universidad de New York (una de las 30 mejores universidades del mundo según el Ranking de Shangai).

Resumen: 

Game theory is an emerging modeling tool in engineering to capture complex interactions in large-scale intelligent systems such as autonomous systems, smart cities and the Internet of Things. Also, game theory is a quantitative method to understand conflicts and contentions among players or systems. These features make the theory an appropriate tool to model and design secure and resilient cyber-physical and human systems. In this talk, we will first give a short introduction to the theory and its applications. Then, we will present a meta-game approach to the multi-layer and multi-type cyber and physical interactions to provide a holistic analytical framework for assessing cyber risks of CPS under advanced persistent threats. We will leverage the theory as a guideline for developing security-hardening strategies for the network security and designing resilient controllers to respond to failures. We use the Internet of Controlled Things and the autonomous systems as case studies to illustrate the design methodologies.

Biografía: 

Quanyan Zhu received B. Eng. in Honors Electrical Engineering from McGill University in 2006, M.A.Sc. from University of Toronto in 2008, and Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) in 2013.  After a short stint at Princeton University, he joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at New York University (NYU) as an assistant professor in 2014. He is a principal investigator of several NSF grants related to game theory, smart grid, network security and privacy, resilient critical infrastructures, cyber-physical systems and cyber deception. He is a recipient of best paper awards at the International Conference on Information Fusion (Fusion 2015), ACM CCS Workshop on Managing Insider Security Threats (MIST 2015), and the International Symposium on Resilient Control Systems (ISRCS 2011). He spearheaded INFOCOM Workshop on Communications and Control on Smart Energy Systems (CCSES), Midwest Workshop on Control and Game Theory (WCGT) and New York Multidisciplinary Symposium on Security and Privacy.

- Cronograma de la propuesta

Descripción: Seminario de seis horas de duración titulado “Game-Theoretic Approach to Security and Resilience of Cyber-Physical Systems”.
Tipo de actividad: Optativa