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edfas.org ELECTRONIC DEVICE FAILURE ANALYSIS | VOLUME 21 NO. 2 36 in Seconds,” IEEE Spectrum, [online] Available at: “This Tech Would Have Spotted the Secret Chinese Chip in Seconds” [Accessed 18 Oct. 2018]. 14. N. Asadizanjani, M. Tehranipoor, and D. Forte: “PCB Reverse Engineering using Nondestructive X-ray Tomography and Advanced Image Processing,” IEEE Trans. Components, Packag. Manuf. Technol., 2017, p. 1-8. 15. U. Guin, D. Dimase, and M. Tehranipoor: “Counterfeit Integrated Circuits: Detection, Avoidance, and the Challenges Ahead,” J. Electron. Test. Theory Appl., 2014. 16. M.T. Rahman, Q. Shi, S. Tajik, H. Shen, D.L. Woodard, M. Tehranipoor, and N. Asadizanjani: “Physical Inspection & Attack: New Frontier in Hardware Security,” Proc. of 3nd International Verification and Security Workshop (IVSW), 2018. 17. N. Vashistha, M.T. Rahman, H. Shen, D.L. Woodard, N. Asadizanjani, and M. Tehranipoor: “Detecting Hardware Trojans Inserted by Untrusted Foundry using Physical Inspection and Advanced Image Processing Techniques,” Publication pending in Spring Journal of Hardware Systemand Security (HaSS), tentatively December 1, 2018. 18. U.J. Botero, M. Tehranipoor, and D. Forte: “Upgrade/Downgrade: Efficient and Secure Legacy Electronic System Replacement,” IEEE Design & Test, 2018. ABOUT THE AUTHORS FatemehGanji is apostdoctoral fellowat the Florida Institute for Cybersecurity (FICS). She received her Ph.D. in electrical engineering fromthe Technical University of Berlin in 2017. She has focused her research activities on applied and theoretical machine learning techniques as well as mathematical tools for the security assessment of hardware primitives, for instance, physically unclonable func- tions. Before joining FICS, Ganji was a postdoctoral research fellow at T-Labs, Telekom Innovation Laboratories, and the Technical University of Berlin. She has coauthored papers for the International Association for Cryptologic Research and IEEE journals and conference proceedings. Domenic Forte received his B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Manhattan College, Riverdale, N.Y., in 2006, and an M.S. degree and Ph.D. in electrical engineering fromthe University of Maryland, College Park, in 2010 and 2013, respectively. Currently, he is an assis- tant professor in the electrical and computer engineering department at the University of Florida, Gainesville. Forte is a recipient of the NSF Faculty Early Career Development Program Award (2017), Army Research Office Young Investigator Award (2016), Northrop Grumman Fellowship (2012), and George Corcoran Memorial Outstanding Teaching Award (2008). Navid Asadizanjani received a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the University of Connecticut in 2014. He is currently an assistant professor in the electrical and com- puter engineering department at the University of Florida, Gainesville. Asadizanjani received several best paper awards from the International Symposiumon Hardware Oriented Security and Trust and International Symposium on Flexible Automation. He also received the D.E. Crow Innovation award from the University of Connecticut. He is the program chair of the PAINE conference and serves on the technical program committee of the International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis and IEEE Computing and Communication Workshop and Conference. Mark M. Tehranipoor is the Intel Charles E. Young Preeminence Endowed Chair Professor in Cybersecurity at the University of Florida. Tehranipoor has published over 400 journal articles and conference papers and delivered 200 invited talks and keynote addresses. He has published 11 books and 20 book chapters. He co-founded the IEEE International Symposium on Hardware-Oriented Security and Trust (HOST) and has served as the general chair of HOST 2008 and HOST 2009. He is currently serving as a founding editor in chief for the Journal on Hardware and Systems Security . Tehranipoor previously served as the founding director for CHASE and CSI centers at the University of Connecticut. He is a founding director of the FICS. DamonWoodard received a B.S. degree in computer science and computer information systems fromTulaneUniversity in1997, anM.E. degree in computer science andengineering fromPennsylvania State University in 1997, and a Ph.D. in computer science and engineering from the University of Notre Dame in 2005. He is currently an associate professor in the department of electrical and com- puter engineering at the University of Florida and a member of the FICS research team. He is also a member of Navy Crane’s Computer Vision and Machine Learning for Hardware Assurance Technical Working Group.
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