VMI CIS Department

VMI CIS Department

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VMI CIS Department Computer and information scientists design, analyze, plan, build and secure these systems.

Information, computing, and information technology play a dominant role in shaping the world and will be evermore pervasive as we progress into the 21st Century. Within this broad area of design, the VMI CIS program provides cadets the opportunity to experience designing computer software components and implementing software systems as well as designing quality testing of products. We also provide

2018-2019 - Computer and Information Sciences - Virginia Military Institute 02/26/2020

CDT Causey represented VMI at iiWAS 2019
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Aaron Causey ’20 has racked up a remarkable achievement: becoming the first VMI cadet majoring in computer science to present his research at an international conference. Read more:

2018-2019 - Computer and Information Sciences - Virginia Military Institute Aaron Causey ’20 presents his research on “Hybrid Disaster Response System Using Web of Things” at an international cybersecurity conference in Munich, Germany.—Photo courtesy of Dr. Youna Jung.

01/14/2020

Three CIS capstone projects are introduced in the VMI Institute Report

01/14/2020

The ethical framework of Brig. Gen. Jeff Smith '79 was introduced in the VMI Institute Report in December 2019.

Photos from VMI CIS Department's post 12/19/2019

Four CIS cadets presented their undergraduate research in the international conference (iiWAS 2019) held in Germany
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It is my pleasure to introduce three research papers that was presented by CIS cadets in the international conference (iiWAS 2019: http://www.iiwas.org/conferences/iiwas2019/index.php).

1. HyDRS-WoT: Hybrid Disaster Response System using Web of Things – Dr. Youna Jung and Cadet Aaron Causey
2. BM25-AH: Enhanced BM25 Algorithm for Domain-Specific Search Engine – Cadet Kirk kalian, Cadet Charles Remig, and Dr. Youna Jung
3. Security Issues in Mobile Healthcare Applications - Cadet Alexander Feldner and Dr. Youna Jung
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Photos from VMI CIS Department's post 12/19/2019

CIS in the International Cybersecurity conference (CyCON)
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The dean and Col. Eltoweissy, Head of the CIS dept., funded eight CIS cadets to attend the international cybersecurity conference (CyCON 2019) from November 18th to 20th.

While attending the conference, the cadets and Dr. Youna Jung had the great opportunity to learn innovating ideas on technology and cyber defense strategies, as well as a tremendous chance to network with current influential people in the cyber community. Our cadets had the privilege of meeting Mr. David Luber, the current Executive Director for Cyber Command, as well as the Director of the NSA in Colorado. Many cadets were able to have fantastic conversations with influential leaders in the NSA, U.S. Army Cyber Command and the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence (CCDCOE) and in turn, receive valuable opportunities for internships and jobs.

[Cadets]
1. Cadet Cullen Turney
2. Cadet Michael McNamara
3. Cadet Kat Yates
4. Cadet Nathaniel Coley
5. Cadet Emily Hattman
6. Cadet Zachary Farr
7. Cadet Noah Goldsmith
8. Cadet Jonathan Williams

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2019 International Conference on Cyber Conflict (CyCon U.S.) 09/26/2019

Call for Applications
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Dear CIS Majors,

As the director of the REEL (Research Excellence and Experiential Learning) committee, I invite eight CIS cadets to attend the 2019 International Conference on Cyber Conflict U.S. that take place 18-20 November in at the Crystal Gateway Marriott in Arlington, VA (http://aci.cvent.com/events/2019-international-conference-on-cyber-conflict-cycon-u-s-/event-summary-6fa2dad0721d43249d40ca05d3a5e94a.aspx).

The CyCon U.S. is a premier international conference on cybersecurity. It provides a venue for fresh ideas, relevant and actionable content, insight into future trends, and access to industry, government, and military leaders, cyber innovators, and pioneers in the discipline. The conference promotes multidisciplinary cyber initiatives and furthers research and cooperation on cyber threats and opportunities. CyCon U.S. is a collaborative effort between the Army Cyber Institute at the United States, Military Academy and the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence.

If you want to apply for this opportunity, please submit your application packet by September 27 (Friday).

1. Eligibility: All CIS Majors.

2. Prize
We will cover travel and accommodation expenses including
- Conference Registration
- Hotel
- Transportation
- Meals

3. Agreement
A winner must promise that
1) He/she will attend the entire program of the Cycon US conference
2) Individual acts are not allowed during the trip.
3)He/she will submit a report within one week after the completion of the conference trip. All the reports will be forwarded to the Dean and Superintendent.

If against the agreement above, cadets must restitute all the expenses that he/she spent to VMI and CIS.

3. Criteria
Criteria for selection include applicants' achievements in academics, their leadership, and the potential impact of the attendance on our department and VMI.

4. Application packet
Application packets must be prepared by the applicants themselves. The packets must include the following:
1) Cover sheet - On a single page, include a) Name of applicant, b) Cadet ID, c) Class, d) Email, and e) Phone.
2) Personal statement - The applicant must submit a personal statement addressing a) Qualification of applicant and b) Potential Impacts on applicant's career, CIS, and VMI. The personal statement MUST NOT EXCEED TWO pages.
3) Transcript

5. Application and Selection Processes
All application packages must be submitted electronically to Dr. Jung ([email protected]) by September 27.
You will received an email notification confirming receipt of your application.
All applications will be reviewed by the REEL committee of CIS (Committee chair: Dr. Jung), and select eight winners at maximum.

Please contact Dr. Jung with any questions.

Best,
MAJ Jung

2019 International Conference on Cyber Conflict (CyCon U.S.)

Photos from VMI CIS Department's post 09/11/2019

Dr. Zhang on the VMI Website
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Lexington, Va., July 10, 2019—For the past several years, Lt. Col. Anne Alerding has been taking cadets into soybean fields with the goal of learning why some fields produce bountiful crops while others perform poorly. This year, though, Alerding’s research has gone airborne, even as she and others stay on the ground.

Thanks to an interdisciplinary project involving the biology department and the computer and information science department, Andrew Broecker ’22 is flying a drone over a 150-acre soybean field near Glasgow in southern Rockbridge County. The images captured by the drone’s three cameras provide insight into how well the plants are growing—in a fraction of the time it used to take Alerding and her cadet assistants to walk through a field and visually inspect the plants.

“The best way to detect branching [of a plant] is to go underneath the plant and stare at the stems, but that takes a lot of time,” said Alerding, associate professor of biology.

Alerding, though, hadn’t really thought about other options for checking on plants until Dr. Hongbo Zhang, assistant professor of computer and information science, visited the biology department earlier this year and brought several VMI-owned drones along, with the goal of encouraging collaborative projects.

The next step was to recruit a cadet, and when Alerding met Broecker this spring, he joined up eagerly, well aware that drone experience would go well with his goal of commissioning into the Army and serving in the aviation branch. He’s now conducting his summer work with Alerding and Zhang under the auspices of the Summer Undergraduate Research Institute.

Broecker has quickly learned that research often goes slowly and requires a steep learning curve. “Being a biology major, I wasn’t used to computers and the different types of software and uploading and image analysis,” he commented. “The number one thing [I’ve learned] is patience—not everything goes as planned,” Broecker added. “But it’s definitely been a great experience.”

Broecker explained that the drone’s three cameras capture three kinds of images: RGB (red, green, blue), infrared, and near infrared. The RGB camera takes standard aerial photos, while the other two cameras use heat sensors to measure chlorophyll, a green pigment that helps plants absorb light.

“[The cameras] use red light wavelength to reflect the levels of chlorophyll off the plants,” said Broecker. A higher level of chlorophyll, he explained, means a healthier and more productive plant.

“Soybeans … show tremendous variation in the number of branches they produce, and since each branch increases to the total yield of soybeans, we want to figure out how canopy [leaf] conditions affect branching,” said Alerding. “Drone images will increase the accuracy and volume of our measurements and will help us identify the optimal field conditions to promote high-branching soybeans.”

After each trip to the field, Broecker and Zhang upload the images from the drone’s cameras to a computer running a program that analyzes agricultural data. By the end of the summer, the trio of researchers hope to provide farmer Mack Smith with a research report on their findings so he can use their data to inform future plantings.

Alerding noted that using a drone to monitor crops is part of precision agriculture, which is becoming more common at farms nationwide.

“If you are in the know, and working with Extension agents, a farmer could call in a fly-by where a drone would fly over their crops and monitor them,” said Alerding. “But that’s just starting to take over in our state right now, so we’re sort of at the leading edge of this.”

Zhang, whose trip to the biology department with drones in tow began it all, sees this summer’s work as an example of the kind of interdisciplinary collaboration a small school like VMI can easily produce.

“VMI has a culture to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration through different departments,” said Zhang. He added that another cadet, Kevin Andres ’20, is also conducting drone research this summer, and that he and Andrew are flying drones together and comparing notes. Likewise, he and Alerding stay in close touch—and Zhang doesn’t mind getting hot and dusty when he joins Alerding and Broecker for field work.

“Such close collaborations are making this project successful,” Zhang concluded.

-VMI-

2018-2019 - News - Virginia Military Institute 07/24/2019

Cadet Feldner's SURI project (Class 2020) is in the spotlight.

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Healthcare SURIs Explore Cost Savings, Security
https://www.vmi.edu/news/headlines/2018-2019/healthcare-suris-explore-cost-savings-security.php?fbclid=IwAR3-yXI09tLq1Q4JacK3FjDlzZXAl_DoNpFkZi4jeA8u4G3sCzIhBPAR27o

LEXINGTON, Va., June 13, 2019—This summer, two cadets are working on projects that have the potential to save money for healthcare systems.

Both Tristan Howard ’20, an economics and business major, and Alex Feldner ’21, a computer and information sciences major, are conducting their research under the auspices of the Summer Undergraduate Research Institute (SURI), which is supported by the VMI Center for Undergraduate Research (VCUR).

Feldner, meanwhile, is working to enhance the security of mobile healthcare applications for smartphones. These applications, which allow patients to request medication refills and interact with physicians, can save money and time, but privacy concerns keep many people from using them.

“People know that using such a system is pretty easy, convenient, and cheaper,” said Dr. Youna Jung, assistant professor of computer and information sciences, who is overseeing Feldner’s research. “The reason they keep hesitating to use it is because of privacy.”

Feldner explained that there are three issues related to healthcare applications in general: authenticity, or making sure users are who they say they are; data security, and network security.

There are existing solutions, though, for these challenges. The use of strong passwords and two-factor authentication is meant to ensure authenticity. Encrypting data can enhance data security, and the use of firewalls can likewise boost network security.

There are two problems specific to mobile applications, though—data retention and the usage of personal identifying information. Feldner’s task for the remainder of the summer is to find solutions to those.

He envisions being able to make suggestions to software developers. “What kinds of things must they consider to protect the privacy of patients?” he asked.

It’s easy to think that solutions which work for desktop and laptop computers could work for phones, noted Jung, but since computers and phones use different operating systems, that won’t work.

“A mobile system has a different framework,” said Jung, who is assistant professor of computer and information sciences. “We cannot apply existing methods to mobile healthcare applications.”

If the security and privacy challenges can be addressed, Feldner sees great possibilities for their use by mental health patients, who are often reluctant to seek care in the first place.

In an ideal world, he said, “any mental health patient can access these mobile apps and be able get treatment and diagnosis without feeling like their information or privacy is being misused.”

-Mary Price
Marketing Department
Virginia Military Institute
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2018-2019 - News - Virginia Military Institute Tristan Howard ’20 and Col. Barry Cobb discuss Howard’s research on staffing needs for nurses at the University of Virginia Healthcare System.—VMI Photo by Mary Price.

Photos from VMI CIS Department's post 05/16/2019

Dear All CIS Graduate cadets,

Congratulations on your graduation and best wishes for your next adventure!

05/02/2019

Dykelopedia
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Kirk Kalian (Class 2019), a CIS senior cadet,developed a searchable database of Rat-Dyke relationships.

05/01/2019

New faculty member in CIS
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Please join us in welcoming our new faculty member, Dr. Mohamed Azab, to CIS.

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Mohamed Azab is an assistant professor at the Department of Computer and Information Sciences at Virginia Military Institute. Mohamed received his Ph.D. in Computer Engineering in 2013 from The Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech. He has multiple provisional patents, book chapters and over 60 publications in archival journals and respected conference proceedings.

His research interests lie in the area of cyber security and trustworthy engineering ranging from theory to design and implementation. His recent research crosscuts the areas of Software Defined Networking (SDN) architectures and protocols, high performance and cloud computing, ubiquitous Internet of Things (IoT), and Cyber-Physical systems (CPS). Mohamed is the founder of the Cyber Security and IoT lab, hosting Mohamed’s Ph.D. and Masters students’ research activities.

Mohamed acted as a keynote speaker in multiple prestigious conferences. He served as a reviewer in archival journals and as a member of multiple conferences and workshops steering committees.
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422 Mallory Hall Virginia Military Institute
Lexington, VA
24450