Why did you choose the University of Chicago?

I was really excited by the culture and people in the computer science department and broader university at UChicago. There are many amazing colleagues and students who are intellectually inspiring, working on interesting and impactful ideas, and are all-around energetic and friendly people.

Please describe your primary research interests for a general audience.

My research focuses broadly on improving the state of computer security. Currently, my group studies how we can use large-scale datasets to protect enterprises (companies and organizations) against sophisticated attacks like data breaches and ransomware. Our research spans everything from analyzing real-world data to understand the efficacy and burdens of common security measures to building new systems that can automatically detect and investigate potential attacks.

What is the most interesting thing that you are working on right now?

It’s hard to pick one! One project that I’m very excited about right now focuses on helping organizations recover from a cyberattack in a faster and more comprehensive manner. To properly recover from an attack, organizations need to fully understand what an attacker has done on their computer networks and what data the attacker has managed to compromise. Right now, this process takes weeks of tedious, manual analysis even for teams of expert security analysts. In our project, we’re building a system that can help automatically reconstruct a complete and precise timeline of what an attacker has managed to do. Our hope is that this will dramatically reduce the time it takes for organizations to repair their systems, thoroughly evict the attackers, and implement mitigations against future attacks.

What is one big question in your field that you hope gets answered in your lifetime?

How do we keep organizations safe against computer attacks?

What PSD research outside of your own lab excites you? Elsewhere in the University?

There are so many amazing projects happening! In my department alone, there are too many cool things to name. One area of research that’s very cool is the work on generative AI and privacy that the SAND Lab is doing. Another area of expertise at UChicago that involves researchers from both the CS department and the broader university pertains to problems involving technology, society, and policy, which my colleagues like Nick Feamster, Marshini Chetty, and Aloni Cohen are working on.

Tell us a bit about yourself.

I decided to become a professor in large part for the opportunity to mentor, teach, and work with amazing students; at UChicago, this has been a dream come true! Outside of work, I enjoy reading fiction novels, exploring the city, and trying new kinds of food.

Who inspires you?

My students and collaborators!

What does diversity and inclusion mean to you?

Having a culture and community where everyone feels comfortable being their authentic self and can learn and understand how a variety of people from different backgrounds experience and see the world.

What three words best describe you?

Curious, energetic, and friendly.

This interview was originally published by the Physical Sciences Division. 

Related News

More UChicago CS stories from this research area.
UChicago CS News

SciFM 2026 at UChicago: Inside the Premier Gathering of AI, Foundation Models, and the Future of Scientific Discovery

Jun 03, 2026
Student using ChatGPT
UChicago CS News

Are Students Hiding Their AI Use? The Social Stigma Behind AI Use in the Classroom

May 27, 2026
headshot
In the News

Exploring Sustainable Computing

May 21, 2026
headshot
UChicago CS News

Seeing What Matters: UChicago’s Alex Kale Receives NSF Early CAREER Award for Rethinking Data Visualization Ethics

May 20, 2026
Headshot
UChicago CS News

Nick Feamster Receives 2026 Quantrell Teaching Award

May 14, 2026
headshot
UChicago CS News

From Dark Patterns Research to Landmark Litigation: UChicago CS PhD Graduate Brennan Schaffner Receives ACM SIGCHI Special Recognition Award

May 13, 2026
quicksilver detecting tool
UChicago CS News

Unmasking AI Music: Quicksilver and the Ethical Movement Behind It

May 11, 2026
headshot
UChicago CS News

Rebecca Willett Named 2026 Recipient of the Arthur L. Kelly Faculty Prize

May 11, 2026
headshot
UChicago CS News

Assistant Professor Yuxin Chen Receives Prestigious NSF CAREER Award

May 05, 2026
chart
UChicago CS News

Who Gets Hired, Paid, and Liked? Who Gets Credit? New Research Examines AI’s Role in Writing and the Workplace

Apr 22, 2026
Jiayin presenting her work at CHI
UChicago CS News

The Time Constraints of AI Access Could Change How We Think

Apr 21, 2026
headshots
UChicago CS News

University of Chicago Wins Distinguished Laude Institute Moonshots Seed Grant

Apr 15, 2026
arrow-down-largearrow-left-largearrow-right-large-greyarrow-right-large-yellowarrow-right-largearrow-right-smallbutton-arrowclosedocumentfacebookfacet-arrow-down-whitefacet-arrow-downPage 1CheckedCheckedicon-apple-t5backgroundLayer 1icon-google-t5icon-office365-t5icon-outlook-t5backgroundLayer 1icon-outlookcom-t5backgroundLayer 1icon-yahoo-t5backgroundLayer 1internal-yellowinternalintranetlinkedinlinkoutpauseplaypresentationsearch-bluesearchshareslider-arrow-nextslider-arrow-prevtwittervideoyoutube