Cryptographer and theoretical computer scientist
Yael Tauman Kalai is a cryptographer and theoretical computer scientist and is the Ellen Swallow Richards Professor at MIT in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab.[ 1] Prior to that, she worked as a Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research New England [ 2] [ 3] .
Education and career
Kalai graduated from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1997. She worked with Adi Shamir at the Weizmann Institute of Science , earning a master's degree there in 2001, and then moved to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , where she completed her PhD in 2006 with Shafi Goldwasser as her doctoral advisor. She did postdoctoral study at Microsoft Research and the Weizmann Institute before becoming a faculty member at the Georgia Institute of Technology . She took a permanent position at Microsoft Research in 2008.[ 2] [ 3] She serves on the Scientific Advisory Board for the Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics (ICERM).[ 4]
Contributions
Kalai is known for co-inventing ring signatures , which has become a key component of numerous systems such as Cryptonote and Monero (cryptocurrency) . Subsequently, together with her advisor Shafi Goldwasser , she demonstrated an insecurity in the widely used Fiat–Shamir heuristic . Her work on delegating computation has applications to cloud computing.[ 5]
Recognition
Kalai was an invited speaker on mathematical aspects of computer science at the 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians .[ 6]
Her master's thesis introducing ring signatures won an outstanding master's thesis award[ 3] and MIT PhD dissertation was awarded the George M. Sprowls Award for Outstanding PhD Thesis in Computer Science.[ 3] [ 7]
She was co-chair of the Theory of Cryptography Conference in 2017.[ 8]
She was awarded the 2022 ACM Prize in Computing "for breakthroughs in verifiable delegation of computation and fundamental contributions to cryptography".[ 9]
Personal
Kalai is the daughter of game theorist Yair Tauman .[ 10] Her husband, Adam Tauman Kalai , also works at Microsoft Research.[ 11]
References
^ Yael Kalai, MIT CSAIL , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 23, 2024
^ a b Yael Tauman Kalai, Principal Researcher , Microsoft, retrieved 2018-09-11
^ a b c d Yael Kalai, Researcher, Microsoft Research New England , Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing, 22 October 2014
^ "ICERM - Trustee and Advisory Boards - Trustee & Advisory Boards" . icerm.brown.edu . Retrieved 2021-07-11 .
^ Hardesty, Larry (June 10, 2013), "Securing the cloud: New algorithm solves major problem with homomorphic encryption" , MIT News , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, retrieved 2018-09-11 – via Phys.org
^ "Invited section lectures" , ICM 2018 , retrieved 2018-08-08
^ "Awards and Honors 2007" , EECS Newsletter , Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Fall 2007, retrieved Sep 10, 2018
^ Theory of Cryptography: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference, TCC 2017, Baltimore, MD, USA, November 12-15, 2017 , Springer, retrieved 2018-09-11
^ ACM Prize in Computing Recognizes Yael Tauman Kalai for Fundamental Contributions to Cryptography , Association for Computing Machinery , retrieved April 13, 2023
^ Parshall, Allison (July 27, 2023), "The Cryptographer Who Ensures We Can Trust Our Computers" , Quanta Magazine
^ Knies, Rob (May 14, 2009), New England Researcher Finds Her Bliss , Microsoft
External links
International National Academics