Amit Sahai

Amit Sahai
Born Amit Sahai
1974 (age 4142)
Thousand Oaks City, California
Nationality American
Fields Computer science, cryptography
Institutions Princeton University (2000-2004)
UCLA (2004-)
Alma mater
Thesis Frontiers in Zero Knowledge (2000)
Doctoral advisor Shafi Goldwasser[1]
Known for
  • Cryptographic Obfuscation[2]
  • Functional Encryption[3]
  • Results on Zero-Knowledge Proofs
  • Results on Secure Multi-Party Computation
Website
www.cs.ucla.edu/~sahai/

Amit Sahai (Hindi: अमित सहाय; born 1974) is an American computer scientist. He is a professor of computer science at the UCLA and the director of the Center for Encrypted Functionalities at UCLA.[4]

Biography

Amit Sahai was born in 1974 in Thousand Oaks, California, to parents who had immigrated from India. He received a B.A. in mathematics with a computer science minor from the University of California, Berkeley, summa cum laude, in 1996.[5] At Berkeley, Sahai was named Computing Research Association Outstanding Undergraduate of the Year, North America, and was a member of the three-person team that won first place in the 1996 ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest.[6]

Sahai received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from MIT in 2000, and joined the computer science faculty at Princeton University.[5] In 2004 he moved to UCLA, where he currently holds the position of Professor of Computer Science.

Research and Recognition

Amit Sahai's research interests are in security and cryptography, and theoretical computer science more broadly. He has published more than 100 original technical research papers.[7]

Notable contributions by Sahai include:

Sahai has given a number of invited talks including the 2004 Distinguished Cryptographer Lecture Series at NTT Labs, Japan. He was named an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellow in 2002, received an Okawa Research Grant Award in 2007, a Xerox Foundation Faculty Award in 2010, and a Google Faculty Research Award in 2010. His research has been covered by several news agencies including the BBC World Service.[17]

References

  1. Amit Sahai at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. 1 2 Klarreich, Erica (2014-02-03). "Cryptography Breakthrough Could Make Software Unhackable". Quanta Magazine.
  3. "Number keys promise safer data". BBC News.
  4. "Center for Encrypted Functionalities".
  5. 1 2 "EQuad News, Princeton University, Fall 2000, Volume 13, No. 1".
  6. "History - ICPC 1996".
  7. Amit Sahai at DBLP Bibliography Server
  8. Sanjam Garg; Craig Gentry; Shai Halevi; Mariana Raykova; Amit Sahai; Brent Waters (2013). "Candidate Indistinguishability Obfuscation and Functional Encryption for all Circuits.". Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), 2013 IEEE 54th Annual Symposium on. IEEE: 40–49. doi:10.1109/FOCS.2013.13.
  9. "On the (im)possibility of obfuscating programs". Journal of the ACM (JACM). 59 (2). April 2012. doi:10.1145/2160158.2160159.
  10. Dan Boneh; Amit Sahai; Brent Waters (2011). "Functional encryption: Definitions and challenges". Theory of Cryptography. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. 6597 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science): 253–273. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-19571-6_16.
  11. Dwork, Cynthia; Naor, Moni; Sahai, Amit (2004). "Concurrent Zero Knowledge". Journal of the ACM. 51 (6): 851–898. doi:10.1145/1039488.1039489.
  12. Yuval Ishai; Eyal Kushilevitz; Rafail Ostrovsky; Amit Sahai (2009). "Zero-Knowledge Proofs from Secure Multiparty Computation". SIAM J. Comput. 39 (3): 1121–1152. doi:10.1137/080725398.
  13. Ran Canetti; Yehuda Lindell; Rafail Ostrovsky; Amit Sahai (2002). "Universally composable two-party and multi-party secure computation". Proceedings on 34th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, May 19–21, 2002, Montréal, Québec, Canada: 494–503. doi:10.1145/509907.509980.
  14. Manoj Prabhakaran; Amit Sahai (2004). "New notions of security: achieving universal composability without trusted setup". Proceedings of the 36th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, Chicago, IL, USA: 242–251. doi:10.1145/1007352.1007394.
  15. Yuval Ishai; Manoj Prabhakaran; Amit Sahai (2008). "Founding Cryptography on Oblivious Transfer - Efficiently". Advances in Cryptology - CRYPTO 2008, 28th Annual International Cryptology Conference, Santa Barbara, CA, USA: 572–591. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-85174-5_32.
  16. Prabhakaran, Manoj; Sahai, Amit, eds. (2013). Secure Multi-Party Computation. IOS Press. ISBN 978-1-61499-168-7.
  17. "Profile at Simons Institute".
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.