News
Winner of the iDASH Competition
Our team won the track 1 (Privacy-preserving dissemination) of iDASH Genomic Privacy Competition on Nov 11, 2016, in Chicago, IL. Winners of track 2 (Secure collaboration) and track 3 (Secure outsourcing) are from IBM research and Microsoft research, respectively. Media Coverage Dec 15, 2016 “Vanderbilt-, IBM-, Microsoft-Led Teams Named Winners of Recent iDASH Genomic Privacy Competition“,…
Posted by wanz on November 12, 2016 in News
New Position as a Researcher
I have just started to work as a researcher in GetPreCiSe (The Center for Genetic Privacy and Identity in Community Settings): an NIH Center of Excellence in Ethics Research. My work is focusing on modeling and simulations. More specifically, the goal of my work in this research center is to “develop models to quantify the probability of…
Posted by wanz on July 1, 2016 in News
Media Impact of My PLoS Paper
Online Media April 2, 2015 “Game theory reveals new ways to protect de-identified data“, a featured research news story on the Vanderbilt University‘s official website: http://news.vanderbilt.edu/2015/04/game-theory-reveals-new-ways-to-protect-de-identified-data/. “Game theory reveals new ways to protect de-identified data“, a research news story on University of Texas Department of Computer Science‘s official website: http://cs.utdallas.edu/drmuratkantarcioglu/. Other Places Forwarding webpages http://timallenmdjd.blogspot.com/2015/03/a-game-theoretic-framework-for.html. http://www.nashvillemedicalnews.com/hit-news-of-note-cms-686. https://article.wn.com/view/2015/04/02/Game_theory_reveals_new_ways_to_protect_deidentified_data_Ap/.
Posted by wanz on March 26, 2015 in News
New Paper Published in PLoS ONE
Our paper “A Game Theoretic Framework for Analyzing Re-identification Risks” was published in PLoS ONE on March 25, 2015. It can be accessed through this Link.
Posted by wanz on March 25, 2015 in News
New Paper Accepted by PLoS ONE
Our paper “A Game Theoretic Framework for Analyzing Re-identification Risks“, coauthored by researchers from Vanderbilt University and the University of Texas at Dallas, was officially accepted by PLoS ONE on February 15, 2015.
Posted by wanz on February 15, 2015 in News
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