Author of the publication

Medical Device Security Through Hardware Signatures.

. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA, (2019)base-search.net (ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/60798).

Please choose a person to relate this publication to

To differ between persons with the same name, the academic degree and the title of an important publication will be displayed. You can also use the button next to the name to display some publications already assigned to the person.

 

Other publications of authors with the same name

Medical Device Security Through Hardware Signatures.. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA, (2019)base-search.net (ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/60798).A Novel Approach to Detect Hardware Trojan Attacks on Primary Data Inputs., , , and . WESS, page 2. ACM, (2015)Hardware-Based Run-Time Code Integrity in Embedded Devices., , and . Cryptogr., 2 (3): 20 (2018)Securing Medical Devices Against Hardware Trojan Attacks Through Analog-, Digital-, and Physiological-Based Signatures., , , and . J. Hardw. Syst. Secur., 2 (3): 251-265 (2018)A chip-level security framework for assessing sensor data integrity: work-in-progress., , and . CODES+ISSS, page 20. IEEE / ACM, (2018)Use of Analog Signatures for Hardware Trojan Detection., , , , and . FPGAworld, page 15-22. ACM, (2017)Secure and Dependable NoC-Connected Systems on an FPGA Chip., and . IEEE Trans. Reliability, 65 (4): 1852-1863 (2016)Efficient Buffer Design and Implementation for Wormhole Routers on FPGAs., and . ARC, volume 8405 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 233-239. Springer, (2014)A novel physiological features-assisted architecture for rapidly distinguishing health problems from hardware Trojan attacks and errors in medical devices., , , and . HOST, page 106-109. IEEE Computer Society, (2017)