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DASA award to Dr Victor Sanchez to improve security at airports

Dr Victor Sanchez (PI) from the department's Artificial Intelligence research theme and Prof. Carsten Maple (Co-I) from Warwick Manufacturing Group have been further awarded a research grant by the Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA), which is part of the Ministry of Defence, to continue with Phase 2 of the project R-DIPS - "Real-time Detection of Concealment of Intent for Passenger Screening." The project, which began on October 2019 and ends on February 2021, aims at developing a machine learning and computer vision solution to track, in real-time, multiple individuals across a set of non-overlapping surveillance cameras to detect those with suspicious behaviours and movements within an airport. The project will improve the screening process of passengers to detect those attempting to mask nefarious intent. The R-DIPS project is an international collaboration with Prof. Chang-Tsun Li who is also affiliated with Deakin University, Australia.


EPSRC funding success for Prof. Yulan He

Prof. Yulan He from the department's Data Science and Human-Centred Computing research themes has been awarded a 3-year EPSRC grant to develop a new framework to study model/data uncertainty and model interpretability of AI systems. The interdisciplinary project will assist system stakeholders and developers to understand and reason about the (business, personal, social, etc.) impact of intelligent systems on the world in which they operate, and to understand how and why decisions are taken. It will run in collaboration with Dr. Ritabrata Dutta from the Statistics Department, and Dr. Nelly Bencomo and Prof. Pete Sawyer from Aston University.


New EPSRC award to support combating caller ID spoofing

Demo of caller ID spoofing

Professor Feng Hao (PI) from the Department of Computer Science and Dr Adrian von Mühlenen (co-I) from the Department of Psychology have been awarded an EPSRC grant on “End to End Authentication of Caller ID in Heterogeneous Telephony Systems”. This project will support a research fellow and a senior research fellow in computer science, each for four years, to explore new ways to stop caller ID spoofing without requiring globally trusted authorities, in collaboration with researchers from the Department of Psychology. This project will also aim to develop impacts by engaging with the telecommunication industry via the project partners: Huawei, Truecall, and RedTone.

The award of this project coincided with the announcement in March 2020 by the Federal Communications Commission (FFC), who proposed mandating the adoption of STIR/SHAKEN for all telecom providers in the US in order to stop the caller ID spoofing scams. However, STIR/SHAKEN requires globally trusted authorities, which have been known to be difficult to manage. As opposed to the top-down approach by the FCC, this EPSRC project aims to take a bottom-up approach to develop more effective and more deployable solutions without relying on any globally trusted third parties.

A University press release on this project can be found here.

Wed 22 Apr 2020, 10:52 | Tags: Grants Research Data Science Systems and Security

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