Autonomous Cars – Evaluation of Security Countermeasures (available)

Starting Date: June 2018
Prerequisites: Computer Science Undergraduate Student, Enthusiasm and desire to be a problem solver.
Will results be assigned to University:

Project Description

Autonomous and connected vehicles will be a part of reality in the near future. There are many development efforts currently underway to pave the way for the deployment of autonomous vehicles (self-driving cars) in public areas. These vehicles are a collection of complex and sophisticated computational architectures. Cybersecurity is among many challenges that an autonomous and connected vehicles face. To ensure that the security and privacy preserving mechanisms of such environments are robust and reliable. A thorough study and evaluation of their security mechanism need to be carried out. For evaluation, pen testing of the protection mechanisms is vital.

In this project, the UROP recipient will be given a subsystem (description and related details of the subsystem will be provided to successful students) of autonomous vehicles overall computational architecture for pen testing. The aim to evaluate the security and privacy measures of the given subsystem.

The respective UROP recipient will be pivotal in shaping the scope of this project and lead the research activities in collaboration with the ISG-SCC team.

Required Technical Skills

ISG-SCC value the enthusiasm and commitment significantly and considers technical skills as an acquirable skill during the internship. However, basic understand and knowledge of pen testing, computer networks, cybersecurity and AI will be desirable.

What will you gain during UROP?

During this internship, the objective of the ISG-SCC is to make sure that you develop your independent research and development skills and enhance your skills on a) presenting the project’s progress, b) keeping in line with time management, b) research methods, c) technical writing skills for project outcomes and d) problem identification and solving.

ISG-SCC Track Record

ISG-SCC has successfully run the UROP for the last two years. The success of the previous two years has produced a patent application (under review by patent office) and commercial demo (MVP) under development, and five research papers. Corresponding undergraduate students are named as first authors on the papers and co-inventor on the patent application. Research papers by undergraduate students have won one ‘best student paper award’, featured in a news article on Medium and being pivotal for a World Economic Forum’s project for anti-corruption project. The ethos of ISG-SCC is that undergraduate students have the talent and imagination to sort out unique and innovative solutions. They just need guidance from established researchers, and this is what ISG-SCC will provide during the UROP.