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SNIA Developer Conference September 15-17, 2025 | Santa Clara, CA

Dr. Ava Hedayatipour

Assistant Professor (CET/EET Advisor)

California State University Long Beach

Dr. Ava Hedayatipour joined the CSULB Department of Electrical Engineering as an Assistant Professor in Fall 2020. Dr. Ava received her Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She earned a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from the Iran University of Science and Technology in 2012, and a M.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training University in Iran in 2015. Dr. Hedayatipour's current research interests include analog integrated circuit designs, bio-implantable and biomedical devices, low- power and low-noise designs, microelectronics, mixed-signal VLSI designs, and hardware security. During graduate studies, she developed the first integrated secure multimodal sensor that uses low power blocks to implement impedance and temperature sensor, with security fabricated with a Lorenz chaotic circuit. Her impedance sensor has been used to detect thoracic impedance (to detect heart failure) and hand gestures (to translate sign language). Her recent work in designing a printable electrode enables individuals to do electrochemical experiments in remote locations. Dr. Hedayatipour is also the recipient of a University of Tennessee Fellowship Award in 2019 and Outstanding Teaching Assistant award in 2018.

Power of Chaos: Long-term Security for Post-quantum Era

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Quantum computing paradigm shift has changed the way we look at data security these days, especially the long-term security of data. Soon, the fast algorithms will be designed to run on quantum computers which can break some of the most widely used cryptosystems, making them vulnerable. However, to address this issue, Chaos theory is actively being studied as a basis for post-quantum era cryptosystems and advancement has been made in the domain of study. The unique characteristic of chaotic systems can be leveraged to produce highly secure cryptographic systems.

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