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ISTeC
Distinguished Lecture in conjunction with the Computer
Science Department and the Electrical and Computer
Engineering Department Seminar Series
Towards Semantic
Adversarial Examples
Speaker: Somesh Jha,
Professor, Computer Science Department, University of
Wisconsin
When: 11:00AM ~ 11:50AM, April 22, 2019
Where: Morgan Library Event Hall
Contact: Indrakshi Ray
(Indrakshi.Ray@colostate.edu)
Abstract: Fueled by massive amounts of data,
models produced by
machine-learning (ML) algorithms, especially deep neural
networks, are
being used in diverse domains where trustworthiness is a
concern,
including automotive systems, finance, health care,
natural
language
processing, and malware detection. Of particular concern
is the
use of
ML algorithms in cyber-physical systems (CPS), such as
self-driving
cars and aviation, where an adversary can cause serious
consequences.
However, existing approaches to generating adversarial
examples
and
devising robust ML algorithms mostly ignore the semantics
and
context of the overall system containing the ML component.
For
example, in an autonomous vehicle using deep learning for
perception,
not every adversarial example for the neural network might
lead
to a
harmful consequence. Moreover, one may want to prioritize
the
search
for adversarial examples towards those that significantly
modify
the
desired semantics of the overall system. Along the same
lines,
existing algorithms for constructing robust ML algorithms
ignore
the
specification of the overall system. In this talk, we
argue that
the
semantics and specification of the overall system has a
crucial
role
to play in this line of research. We present preliminary
research
results that support this claim.
Bio: Somesh Jha received his B.Tech
from Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi in
Electrical Engineering. He received his Ph.D. in Computer
Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1996 under the
supervision of Prof. Edmund Clarke (a Turing award
winner). Currently, Somesh Jha is the Lubar Professor in
the Computer Sciences Department at the University of
Wisconsin (Madison), which he joined in 2000. His work
focuses on analysis of security protocols, survivability
analysis, intrusion detection, formal methods for
security, and analyzing malicious code. Recently, he has
also worked on privacy-preserving protocols and
adversarial ML. Somesh Jha has published over 150 articles
in highly-refereed conferences and prominent journals. He
has won numerous best-paper and distinguished-paper
awards. Prof Jha also received the NSF career award. Prof.
Jha is the fellow of the ACM and IEEE.
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