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Description
Contact tracing has been shown to be effective in limiting the rate of spread of infectious diseases like COVID-19. Several solutions based on the exchange of random, anonymous tokens between users’ mobile devices via Bluetooth, or using users’ location traces have been proposed and deployed. These solutions require the user device to download the tokens (or traces) of infected users from the server. The user tokens are matched with infected users’ tokens to determine an exposure event. These solutions are vulnerable to a range of security and privacy issues, and require large downloads, thus warranting the need for an efficient protocol with strong privacy guarantees. Moreover, these solutions are based solely on proximity between user devices, while COVID-19 can spread from common surfaces as well. Knowledge of areas with a large number of visits by infected users (hotspots) can help inform users to avoid those areas and thereby reduce surface transmission. This thesis proposes a strong secure system for contact tracing and hotspots histogram computation. The contact tracing protocol uses a combination of Bluetooth Low Energy and Global Positioning System (GPS) location data. A novel and deployment-friendly Delegated Private Set Intersection Cardinality protocol is proposed for efficient and secure server aided matching of tokens. Secure aggregation techniques are used to allow the server to learn areas of high risk from location traces of diagnosed users, without revealing any individual user’s location history.
ContributorsSurana, Chetan (Author) / Trieu, Ni (Thesis advisor) / Sankar, Lalitha (Committee member) / Berisha, Visar (Committee member) / Zhao, Ming (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
Description
A distributed wireless sensor network (WSN) is a network of a large number of lowcost,multi-functional sensors with power, bandwidth, and memory constraints, operating
in remote environments with sensing and communication capabilities. WSNs
are a source for a large amount of data and due to the inherent communication and
resource constraints, developing a distributed algorithms to perform statistical parameter
estimation and data analysis is necessary. In this work, consensus based
distributed algorithms are developed for distributed estimation and processing over
WSNs. Firstly, a distributed spectral clustering algorithm to group the sensors based
on the location attributes is developed. Next, a distributed max consensus algorithm
robust to additive noise in the network is designed. Furthermore, distributed spectral
radius estimation algorithms for analog, as well as, digital communication models
are developed. The proposed algorithms work for any connected graph topologies.
Theoretical bounds are derived and simulation results supporting the theory are also
presented.
ContributorsMuniraju, Gowtham (Author) / Tepedelenlioğlu, Cihan (Thesis advisor) / Spanias, Andreas (Thesis advisor) / Berisha, Visar (Committee member) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021