Systems and networking underpin nearly every aspect of our lives, from business and health care to transportation and entertainment. Research advances are crucial for providing new services and ensuring reliability and security in our increasingly digital world. Through theoretical advances, practical implementations, and open-source contributions, our research groups continue to push the boundaries of what’s possible in connecting systems and users.
Our networking groups examine topics ranging from wireless and mobile networking, massively parallel hardware for ML/AI, the Internet of Things, cybersecurity, V2X-based transportation systems, software-defined networking, applications of ML/AI for network operations, and more.
Meanwhile, our systems faculty are engaged in research projects that will lead to more robust, reliable, and secure computer systems for the real world, conducting state-of-the-art work in systems for big data, networks and network architectures, mobile security, cloud computing, and data-intensive computing and databases.
Research Groups and Labs
Distributed Systems and Networks Lab
The DSN Lab focuses on dependable infrastructure research, making the computerized networked infrastructure our society relies upon resilient, performant, and secure.
Order Lab
The overarching goal of the lab is to advance the principles and practices in building next-generation dependable systems for emerging platforms.
People
-
Email:yairamir@jhu.eduPhone:301-806-4803
-
Email:randal@cs.jhu.eduPhone:410-516-8775
-
Yinzhi Cao
Technical Director of the JHU Information Security Institute and Associate ProfessorEmail:yinzhi.cao@jhu.eduPhone:410-516-6718 -
Anton Dahbura
Executive Director of the Johns Hopkins University Information Security Institute and Co-Director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Assured AutonomyEmail:AntonDahbura@jhu.eduPhone:410-516-0211 -
Email:sghorba1@jhu.eduPhone:410-516-6781
-
Email:amarder@jhu.edu
-
Email:ksabnan2@jhu.eduPhone:908-385-3642
-
Email:scott@cs.jhu.eduPhone:410-516-5299
-
Email:szalay@jhu.eduPhone:410-516-7217
New CS faculty Alex Marder receives $5 million NSF grant
Alex Marder, an assistant professor of computer science, has received the grant as part of the National Science Foundation’s Convergence Accelerator program.