Jennifer Seberry

Jennifer Roma Seberry (born 13 February 1944 in Sydney) is an Australian cryptographer, mathematician, and computer scientist, currently a professor at the University of Wollongong, Australia. She was formerly the head of the Department of Computer Science and director of the Centre for Computer Security Research at the university.

Education and career

Seberry attended Parramatta High School and got her BSc at University of New South Wales, 1966; MSc at La Trobe University, 1969; PhD at La Trobe University, 1971 (Computational Mathematics); B.Ec. with two years completed at University of Sydney.[1] Her doctoral advisor was Bertram Mond.[2]

Seberry was the first person to teach cryptology at an Australian University (University of Sydney). She was also the first woman Professor of Computer Science in Australia. She was the first woman Reader in Combinatorial Mathematics in Australia.

As of 2020 she had supervised 30 doctorates and had 71 academic descendants. Her notable students have included Peter Eades, Mirka Miller, and Deborah Street.[2][3]

Service

Seberry was a founding member of the University of Sydney's Research Foundation for Information Technology Information Security Group in 1987. The group grew into the Australian Information Security Association, an Australian representative industry body with over 1000 paid members and branches in most capitals.[4]

Seberry was one of the founders of the Asiacrypt international conference in 1990 (then called Auscrypt).

Research

Seberry has contributed to the knowledge and use of Hadamard matrices and bent functions for network security.[5] She has published numerous papers on mathematics, cryptography, and computer and network security. She led the team that produced the LOKI and LOKI97 block ciphers and the HAVAL cryptographic hash functions. Seberry is also a co-author of the Py stream cipher, which was a candidate for the eSTREAM stream cipher project.

gollark: I think some sort of actual long-term reopening plan is needed.
gollark: They do have to unlockdown at some point and probably quite soon. The question isn't really how many people could have died without lockdown in place, it's how many could have died who wouldn't have later anyway.
gollark: I'm not sure about that.
gollark: It *could* still happen *at some point*, lockdown or not.
gollark: I don't think we even have some sort of contact tracing app available yet.

References

  1. Seberry, Jennifer. "Complete Vitae". University of Wollongong. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  2. Jennifer Seberry at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Flannery, Dane L.; Horadam, Kathryn J. (2010). "Guest editorial for the special issue on design theory". Cryptography and Communications. 2. pp. 127–128.
  4. Seberry, Jennifer. "MyStory" (PDF). University of Wollongong. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  5. "Jennifer Seberry's life work". University of Wollongong. Retrieved 22 September 2006.
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