Rebecca N. Wright Explained

Alma Mater:Columbia University (BA)
Yale University (PhD)
Doctoral Advisor:Michael J. Fischer
Awards:IEEE Fellow (2017)
Work Institution:Rutgers University
Barnard College
Field:Computer security

Rebecca N. Wright (born 1967) is an American computer scientist known for her research in computer security. She is the Druckenmiller Professor of Computer Science at Barnard College.

Education and career

Wright was an undergraduate at Columbia University, graduating in 1988.She went to Yale University for her graduate studies, and completed her Ph.D. there in 1994. Her dissertation, Achieving Perfect Secrecy Using Correlated Random Variables, was supervised by Michael J. Fischer.

Wright was employed at DIMACS at Rutgers University from 2007 to 2018,[1] starting as deputy director and becoming director in 2011.In January 2019, she moved to Barnard College, as the inaugural director of a new computer science program there.

Recognition

Wright was named an IEEE Fellow in 2017 "for contributions to applied cryptography and privacy".

In 2019, she won the Distinguished Service Award of SIGACT, part of the Association for Computing Machinery, "for her 11-year leadership of DIMACS, particularly in continuing and expanding the research and educational missions of DIMACS, for promoting diversity in computer science, and for using her expertise in privacy and security to help shape public policy on a national level".

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: DIMACS :: People. dimacs.rutgers.edu. 2020-03-06.