ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
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- Creators: Doupe, Adam
- Creators: Wang, Robert
This research expands on the notion of bringing computational power to the edge- of-the-network, and then integrating it with the cloud computing paradigm whilst providing services to diverse IoT-based applications. This expansion is achieved through the establishment of a new computing model that serves as a platform for IoT-based devices to communicate with services in real-time. We name this paradigm as Gateway-Oriented Reconfigurable Ecosystem (GORE) computing. Finally, this thesis proposes and discusses the development of a policy management framework for accommodating our proposed computational paradigm. The policy framework is designed to serve both the hosted applications and the GORE paradigm by enabling them to function more efficiently. The goal of the framework is to ensure uninterrupted communication and service delivery between users and their applications.
Android permission system is more of app-driven rather than user controlled, which means it is the applications that specify their permission requirement and the only thing which the user can do is choose not to install a particular application based on the requirements. Given the all or nothing choice, users succumb to pressures and needs to accept permissions requested. This thesis proposes a couple of ways for providing the users finer grained control of application privileges. The same methods can be used to evade the Permission Re-delegation attack.
This thesis also proposes and implements a novel methodology in Android that can be used to control the access privileges of an Android application, taking into consideration the context of the running application. This application-context based permission usage is further used to analyze a set of sample applications. We found the evidence of applications spoofing or divulging user sensitive information such as location information, contact information, phone id and numbers, in the background. Such activities can be used to track users for a variety of privacy-intrusive purposes. We have developed implementations that minimize several forms of privacy leaks that are routinely done by stock applications.
Regardless of its use this information can be sensitive in nature and should therefore be under the control of the user. Currently, a user has little say in the manner that their information is processed once it has been released. An ad-hoc approach is currently in use, where the location based service providers each maintain their own policy over personal information usage.
In order to allow more user control over their personal information while still providing for targeted advertising, a systematic approach to the release of the information is needed. It is for that reason we propose a User-Centric Context Aware Spatiotemporal Anonymization framework. At its core the framework will unify the current spatiotemporal anonymization with that of traditional anonymization so that user specified anonymization requirement is met or exceeded while allowing for more demographic information to be released.
This approach consists of three steps. First, the received samples are processed by a sandbox environment to perform a dynamic behavior analysis. Second, the reports of the dynamic behavior analysis are parsed to extract identifying features which are matched against other known and analyzed samples. Lastly, those matches that are determined to express a relationship are visualized as an edge connected pair of nodes in an undirected graph.
ure of merit (zT) due to quantum connement eects. Improving the eciency of
thermoelectric devices allows for the development of better, more economical waste
heat recovery systems. Such systems may be used as bottoming or co-generation
cycles in conjunction with conventional power cycles to recover some of the wasted
heat. Thermal conductivity measurement systems are an important part of the char-
acterization processes of thermoelectric materials. These systems must possess the
capability of accurately measuring the thermal conductivity of both bulk and thin-lm
samples at dierent ambient temperatures.
This paper discusses the construction, validation, and improvement of a thermal
conductivity measurement platform based on the 3-Omega technique. Room temperature
measurements of thermal conductivity done on control samples with known properties
such as undoped bulk silicon (Si), bulk gallium arsenide (GaAs), and silicon dioxide
(SiO2) thin lms yielded 150 W=m􀀀K, 50 W=m􀀀K, and 1:46 W=m􀀀K respectively.
These quantities were all within 8% of literature values. In addition, the thermal
conductivity of bulk SiO2 was measured as a function of temperature in a Helium-
4 cryostat from 75K to 250K. The results showed good agreement with literature
values that all fell within the error range of each measurement. The uncertainty in
the measurements ranged from 19% at 75K to 30% at 250K. Finally, the system
was used to measure the room temperature thermal conductivity of a nanocomposite
composed of cadmium selenide, CdSe, nanocrystals in an indium selenide, In2Se3,
matrix as a function of the concentration of In2Se3. The observed trend was in
qualitative agreement with the expected behavior.
i
have begun to incorporate forensics to analyze their mobile devices and respond
to any incidents of malicious activity in order to protect their sensitive data. Current
forensic tools, however, can only look a static image of the device being examined,
making it difficult for a forensic analyst to produce conclusive results regarding the
integrity of any sensitive data on the device. This research thesis expands on the
use of forensics to secure data by implementing an agent on a mobile device that can
continually collect information regarding the state of the device. This information is
then sent to a separate server in the form of log files to be analyzed using a specialized
tool. The analysis tool is able to look at the data collected from the device over time
and perform specific calculations, according to the user's specifications, highlighting
any correlations or anomalies among the data which might be considered suspicious
to a forensic analyst. The contribution of this paper is both an in-depth explanation
on the implementation of an iOS application to be used to improve the mobile forensics
process as well as a proof-of-concept experiment showing how evidence collected
over time can be used to improve the accuracy of a forensic analysis.
This research analyzes and develops MMA software while considering its interactions with human physiology to assure trustworthiness. A novel app development methodology is used to objectively evaluate trustworthiness of a MMA by generating evidences using automatic techniques. It involves developing the Health-Dev β tool to generate a) evidences of trustworthiness of MMAs and b) requirements assured code generation for vulnerable components of the MMA without hindering the app development process. In this method, all requests from MMAs pass through a trustworthy entity, Trustworthy Data Manager which checks if the app request satisfies the MMA requirements. This method is intended to expedite the design to marketing process of MMAs. The objectives of this research is to develop models, tools and theory for evidence generation and can be divided into the following themes:
• Sustainable design configuration estimation of MMAs: Developing an optimization framework which can generate sustainable and safe sensor configuration while considering interactions of the MMA with the environment.
• Evidence generation using simulation and formal methods: Developing models and tools to verify safety properties of the MMA design to ensure no harm to the human physiology.
• Automatic code generation for MMAs: Investigating methods for automatically
• Performance analysis of trustworthy data manager: Evaluating response time generating trustworthy software for vulnerable components of a MMA and evidences.performance of trustworthy data manager under interactions from non-MMA smartphone apps.