Yingying Chen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yingying (Jennifer) Chen is a computer scientist whose research involves mobile computing, the internet of things,[1] the security implications of mobile sensor data,[2][3] wearable technology,[3][4] and activity trackers.[5][6] She is a professor at Rutgers University, where she heads the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering[7] and directs the Data Analysis and Information SecuritY (DAISY) Lab.[8]
Chen has a 2007 Ph.D. from Rutgers,[7] jointly supervised by Richard Martin and Wade Trappe.[9] Before returning to Rutgers as a faculty member, she worked for Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise and then as a professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology.[7]
Books
Chen is the coauthor of books including:
- Securing Emerging Wireless Systems (with Wenyuan Xu, Wade Trappe, and Yanyong Zhang, Springer, 2009)
- Pervasive Wireless Environments: Detecting and Localizing User Spoofing (with Jie Yang, Wade Trappe, and Jerry Cheng, Springer, 2014)
- Sensing Vehicle Conditions for Detecting Driving Behaviors (with Jiadi Yu and Xiangyu Xu, Springer, 2018)