The University of Arizona

Who we are



Christian Collberg

Christian Collberg works on all forms of software protection: code obfuscation, software watermarking, and tamperproofing. He recently published the first comprehensive book on software protection. His current research interest is in remote entrusting, i.e. detecting tampering of programs in client-server scenarios.

Saumya Debray

Saumya Debray is Professor of Computer Science at The University of Arizona, where he has been a faculty member since August 1986. His research interests include low-level static and dynamic program analysis and transformation, with specific application to automatic deobfuscation of malware binaries.

David Lowenthal

David Lowenthal joined UA Computer Science in January 2009. His research centers on parallel and distributed computing, operating systems, and networks. Most of his current and past research projects involve addressing fundamental parallel computing problems, such as data distribution, scalability prediction, and energy reduction, through a system software perspective. He has also worked on spoofing TCP servers from TCP clients, which is essentially a man-at-the-end attack.

John Hartman

John Hartman

Loukas Lazos

Loukas Lazos joined UA Electrical and Computer Engineering Department in August 2007. Before joining University of Arizona, he was a Co-director of the Network Security Lab at the University of Washington. His research focuses on network security for wireless networks. His contributions include resource-efficient methods for secure multicast communications in wireless ad hoc networks, secure location estimation methods for sensor networks, modeling and characterization of wormholes, mitigation of sophisticated jamming attacks, and node misbehavior identification.

Srinivasan Ramasubramanian

Srinivasan Ramasubramanian received the B.E. (Hons.) degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS), Pilani, India, in 1997, and the Ph.D. degree in Computer Engineering from Iowa State University, Ames, in 2002. He is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Arizona, where he held the position of Assistant Professor from August 2002 to July 2008. He is a co-developer of the Hierarchical Modeling and Analysis Package (HIMAP), a reliability modeling and analysis tool, which is currently being used at Boeing, Honeywell, and several other companies and universities. His research interests include architectures and algorithms for optical and wireless networks, multipath routing, fault tolerance, monitoring and localization, network tomography, and performance analysis.

Webmaster: Christian Collberg