Newsmakers

Highlighting the professional and academic accomplishments of College of Computing and Information Sciences students, faculty, and staff.

Newsmakers are a quick and easy way to acknowledge the professional and academic accomplishments of RIT students, faculty, and staff, such as publishing an article in a scholarly journal, presenting research at a conference, serving on a panel discussion, earning a scholarship, or winning an award. Newsmakers appear in News and Events as well as the "In the News" section on faculty/staff directory profile pages.

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April 2025

  • April 16, 2025

    Nidhi Rastogi, assistant professor in the Department of Software Engineering, recently published “CTIBench: A Benchmark for Evaluating LLMs in Cyber Threat Intelligence” with computing and information sciences Ph.D. student Md Tanvirul Alam, computer science Ph.D. student Dipkamal Bhusal, and Le Nguyen ’24 (data science). The established benchmark was used by the Google Security Blog to evaluate Google's latest LLM security model, with Google describing their work as a leading threat intelligence benchmark.

  • April 16, 2025

    Jessica Ancillotti, a computer science master’s student in the Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences, presented “Determining SPHINCS+ Readiness for Standardization of SLH-DSA Signature” at the Women in CyberSecurity (WiCyS) Conference on April 2 in Dallas. Her research focuses on evaluating the performance and adoption potential of SPHINCS+, a post-quantum digital signature scheme recently standardized by NIST.

  • April 11, 2025

    Igor Polotai, a third-year game design and development and history double major, was named to the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge's 2025 Student Voting Honor Roll. Polotai is one of only 232 students nationwide to receive this distinction and was recognized as a Voter Engagement Leadership Scholar with RIT’s Center for Leadership & Civic Engagement. The distinction highlights college student leaders for committing to nonpartisan democratic engagement and contributions to their local communities.

March 2025

  • March 26, 2025

    Qi Yu, professor in the School of Information, received a new award from the Department of Defense for his project, Dynamic Scene Graphs for Extracting Activity-Based Intelligence. The project will develop a dynamic learning framework to extract Activity-Based Intelligence in complex military operations.

  • March 26, 2025

    Michael Jackson, associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Microelectronic Engineering, hosted a half-day short course on cleanroom basics for seven employees of Optimax on March 13.

  • March 24, 2025

    A delegation from RIT’s AWARE-AI program attended the second NRT+ Summit at Clemson ICAR, March 10-12. The event focused on technology transfer, interdisciplinary science communication, and career development. Ph.D. students Calvin Nau and Cedric Bone received top honors: Best Three-Minute Research Presentation, Best Team Commercialization Pitch, respectively.

  • March 24, 2025

    Yinxi Liu, assistant professor in the Department of Cybersecurity, co-authored a paper accepted at the ACM International Conference on the Foundations of Software Engineering in Norway. Collaborating with researchers from Southern University of Science and Technology and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Liu’s paper, “Enhancing the Detection of Smart Contract State-Inconsistency Bugs via Flow Divergence and Multiplex Symbolic Execution,” introduces DivertScan, a tool that detects vulnerabilities in Ethereum smart contracts.

  • March 21, 2025

    Rajendra K. Raj, professor of computer science, led three sessions at the ACM SIGCSE Technical Symposium 2025 in Pittsburgh. The sessions focused on key areas in computer science education, including integrating security into the curriculum, revising undergraduate programs to align with the Computer Science Curricula 2023 guidelines, and discussing the evolving landscape of ABET accreditation criteria for computing programs. His sessions provided educators with insights into best practices for modernizing computer science education.

  • March 4, 2025

    Reynold Bailey, professor of computer science, presented “International Mobility for Ph.D. Students: Key Learnings” at SIGCSE 2025 in Pittsburgh. The work, co-authored by Cecilia Alm, Esa Rantanen, and Ferat Sahin, explores key insights and strategies for enhancing global mobility opportunities for Ph.D. students.