computer science https://www.uoguelph.ca/porticomagazine Wed, 28 Oct 2020 18:40:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.3 Cybersecurity, threat intelligence program unique in Canada https://www.uoguelph.ca/porticomagazine/2019/10/cybersecurity-threat-intelligence-program-unique-in-canada/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cybersecurity-threat-intelligence-program-unique-in-canada Thu, 17 Oct 2019 15:49:13 +0000 https://www.uoguelph.ca/porticomagazine/?p=3477 The University of Guelph has launched a new graduate degree in cybersecurity and threat intelligence to train the next generation on how to stop cyberattacks before they happen. “Attacks are becoming more complicated, digitalization is pervading more of our world and too little attention has been paid to educating cybersecurity professionals,” says Prof. Ali Dehghantanha,

The post Cybersecurity, threat intelligence program unique in Canada appeared first on .

]]>
The University of Guelph has launched a new graduate degree in cybersecurity and threat intelligence to train the next generation on how to stop cyberattacks before they happen.

“Attacks are becoming more complicated, digitalization is pervading more of our world and too little attention has been paid to educating cybersecurity professionals,” says Prof. Ali Dehghantanha, who teaches in U of G’s School of Computer Science and is director of the new program.

The new master of cybersecurity and threat intelligence will help meet the need for experts in threat intelligence, threat hunting, digital forensics, intrusion prevention, privacy and crypto-analysis.

Unique in Canada, it offers a hand-on approach to cybersecurity training. Students in the program receive laptops with cutting-edge software and work in a state-of-the-art, $2-million isolated lab that will allow them to run real-world attacks.

“Our program will be focused on the most challenging and technical aspects of the information security field and deliver graduates with advanced skill sets that are in high demand,” says Dave Whittle, U of G’s associate vice-president and chief information officer.

The post Cybersecurity, threat intelligence program unique in Canada appeared first on .

]]>
Coursework: adding a pop culture twist to computer science class https://www.uoguelph.ca/porticomagazine/2016/07/coursework-adding-a-pop-culture-twist-to-computer-science-class/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=coursework-adding-a-pop-culture-twist-to-computer-science-class Mon, 25 Jul 2016 14:46:35 +0000 https://www.uoguelph.ca/porticomagazine/?p=1527 He doesn’t play chess. And he doesn’t watch The Big Bang Theory. So how did computer science student Patrick Hartman end up tops in a class assignment for an online chess tournament modelled after the TV sitcom? Speed and strategy, says Hartman. His program won 53 of 58 games in a round-robin tournament run by

The post Coursework: adding a pop culture twist to computer science class appeared first on .

]]>
He doesn’t play chess. And he doesn’t watch The Big Bang Theory. So how did computer science student Patrick Hartman end up tops in a class assignment for an online chess tournament modelled after the TV sitcom?

Speed and strategy, says Hartman. His program won 53 of 58 games in a round-robin tournament run by Prof. Stefan Kremer, School of Computer Science, for “Introduction to Intelligent Systems,” a third-year artificial intelligence (AI) course.

In the process, Hartman and his classmates learned more about AI — the ultimate goal for Kremer, who added the pop culture twist as another way to engage students in a regular course assignment to write chess-playing programs.

“My goal is to train students to be able to solve interesting computing problems,” says, Kremer. He adds that programming machines to play games is a longstanding tradition in AI courses.

His AI assignments already involved games, puzzles and problem-solving. For this project, he assigned students to write chess-playing programs modelled after a chess version developed by the character Sheldon on The Big Bang Theory.

Unlike Sheldon’s three-player game that uses a three-sided board, Kremer stuck with a simpler two-player version. But he borrowed the sitcom’s made-up chess pieces complete with their unorthodox properties. For example, the serpent “poisons” adjacent pieces and the catapult launches other pieces to land elsewhere on the board.

After his students wrote their programs, he pitted those agents against each other in an online, round-robin tournament of games lasting up to two minutes each.

“I liked the idea of competition,” says Hartman, who aimed to write a program that “thought” its way quickly through possible moves and counterattacks. “It’s chess but it’s more involved than chess. There’s a lot that could happen, a lot of moves to consider and different strategies.” – ANDREW VOWLES

The post Coursework: adding a pop culture twist to computer science class appeared first on .

]]>