The Fourth International Conference on Multimedia Computing, Networking and Applications (MCNA2020)
October 19th - 22nd, 2020 - Valencia, Spain Online Presentations!

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Professor Bhavani Thuraisingham
The University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Title: Integrating Big Data, Data Science and Cyber Security with Applications in Internet of Transportation and Infrastructures
Abstract:

The collection, storage, manipulation, analysis and retention of massive amounts of data have resulted in new technologies including big data analytics and data science. It is now possible to analyze massive amounts of data and extract useful nuggets. However, the collection and manipulation of this data has also resulted in serious security and privacy considerations. Various regulations are being proposed to handle big data so that the privacy of the individuals is not violated. Furthermore, the massive amounts of data being stored may also be vulnerable to cyber attacks.
Big Data, Data Science and Security are being integrated to solve many of the security and privacy challenges. For example, machine learning techniques are being applied to solve security problems such as malware analysis and insider threat detection. However, there is also a major concern that the machine learning techniques themselves could be attacked. Therefore, the machine learning techniques are being adapted to handle adversarial attacks. This area is known as adversarial machine learning. In addition, privacy of the individuals is also being violated through these machine learning techniques as it is now possible to gather and analyze vast amounts of data and therefore privacy enhanced data science techniques are being developed.
With the advent of the web, computing systems are now being used in every aspect of our lives from mobile phones to autonomous vehicles. It is now possible to collect, store, manage, and analyze vast amounts of sensor data emanating from numerous devices and sensors including from various transportation systems. Such systems collectively are known as the Internet of Transportation, which is essentially the Internet of Things for Transportation, where multiple autonomous transportation systems are connected through the web and coordinate their activities. However, security and privacy for the Internet of Transportation and the infrastructures that support it is a challenge. Due to the large volumes of heterogenous data being collected from numerous devices, the traditional cyber security techniques such as encryption are not efficient to secure the Internet of Transportation. Some Physics-based solutions being developed are showing promise. More recently, the developments in Data Science are also being examined for securing the Internet of Transportation and its supporting infrastructures.
To assess the developments on the integration of Big Data, Data Science and Security over the past decade and apply them to the Internet of Transportation, the presentation will focus on three aspects. First it will examine the developments on applying Data Science techniques for detecting cyber security problems such as insider threat detection as well as the advances in adversarial machine learning. Some developments on privacy aware and policy-based data management frameworks will also be discussed. Second it will discuss the developments on securing the Internet of Transportation and its supporting infrastructures and examine the privacy implications. Finally, it will describe ways in which Big Data, Data Science and Security could be incorporated into the Internet of Transportation and Infrastructures.

 

Biography:

Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham is the Founders Chair Professor of Computer Science and the Executive Director of the Cyber Security Research and Education Institute at the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD). She is also a visiting Senior Research Fellow at Kings College, University of London and an elected Fellow of the ACM, IEEE, the AAAS, the NAI and the BCS. Her research interests are on integrating cyber security and artificial intelligence/data science for the past 35 years (where it used to be computer security and data management/mining). She has received several awards including the IEEE CS 1997 Technical Achievement Award, ACM SIGSAC 2010 Outstanding Contributions Award, the IEEE Comsoc Communications and Information Security 2019 Technical Recognition Award, the IEEE CS Services Computing 2017 Research Innovation Award, the ACM CODASPY 2017 Lasting Research Award, the IEEE ISI 2010 Research Leadership Award, the 2017 Dallas Business Journal Women in Technology Award, and the ACM SACMAT 10 Year Test of Time Awards for 2018 and 2019 (for papers published in 2008 and 2009). She co-chaired the Women in Cyber Security Conference (WiCyS) in 2016 and delivered the featured address at the 2018 Women in Data Science (WiDS) at Stanford University serves as the Co-Director of both the Women in Cyber Security and Women in Data Science Centers at UTD. Her 40-year career includes industry (Honeywell), federal research laboratory (MITRE), US government (NSF) and US Academia. Her work has resulted in 130+ journal articles, 300+ conference papers, 150+ keynote and featured addresses, six US patents, fifteen books as well as technology transfer of the research to commercial products and operational systems. She received her PhD from the University of Wales, Swansea, UK, and the prestigious earned higher doctorate (D. Eng) from the University of Bristol, UK.

 

Dr. Khan Muhammad
Sejong University, Seoul, South Korea
Title: Intelligent Video Summary Generation: Current Challenges and Future Directions
Abstract:

There has been an exponential growth in the amount of multimedia data daily acquired from surveillance cameras and many other resources. This massive amount of data requires efficient mechanisms such as video summarization to ensure that only significant data are reported and the redundancy is reduced. Video summarization tends to detect important visual data in the surveillance stream and can help in efficient indexing and retrieval of required data from huge surveillance datasets. This presentation will focus on the mainstream video summarization strategies with their broader overview for entertainment, medical and surveillance domains. Further, it will highlight the challenges confronted by researchers in video summarization domain in terms of multimedia data computing, multi-modality information processing, among many others. Finally, the presentation will be concluded with some future research directions considering the discussed challenges.

 

Biography:

Dr. Khan Muhammad (S’16-M’18) received his PhD degree in Digital Contents from Sejong University, Republic of Korea. He is currently working as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Software and Lead Researcher of Intelligent Media Laboratory, Sejong University, Seoul, South Korea. His research interests include intelligent video surveillance (fire/smoke scene analysis, transportation systems, and disaster management), medical image analysis, (brain MRI, diagnostic hysteroscopy, and wireless capsule endoscopy), information security (steganography, encryption, watermarking, and image hashing), video summarization, multimedia, computer vision, IoT, and smart cities. He has filed/published over 7 patents and 100 papers in peer-reviewed journals and conferences in these areas. He is serving as a reviewer for over 70 well-reputed journals and conferences, from IEEE, ACM, Springer, Elsevier, Wily, SAGE, and Hindawi publishers. He acted as a TPC member and session chair at more than 12 conferences in related areas. He is editorial board member of the “Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Systems” and Review Editor for the Section “Mathematics of Computation and Data Science” in the journal “Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics”.