About
Erisa Karafili is an Associate Professor in Cybersecurity at the University of Southampton.
She is a Leader of Teaching Methods Innovation at the GCHQ/EPSRC Academic Centre of Excellence for Cyber Security Education (ACE-CSE), and a Champion in Security by Design at the GCHQ/EPSRC Academic Centre of Excellence for Cyber Security Research (ACE-CSR) both recognized with the Golden Award.
Erisa is a Fellow of the Higher Educational Academy.
Her main research areas are
- formal methods applied to security and privacy problems
- data sharing in cloud environments
- data access control
- threat models for IoT and hybrid systems
Research
Research groups
Research interests
- Formal methods techniques applied to security problems
- Attributing and investigating Cyber Attacks
- Threat Models for IoT devices and Hybrid systems
- Secure data sharing/re-using
- Applying Argumentation and Knowledge Representation for Cyber Security
Research projects
Active projects
Completed projects
Publications
Pagination
Biography
Dr Erisa Karafili joined the University of Southampton in 2020 as a Lecturer in Cybersecurity. Previously, she was a Marie Curie Fellow at the Department of Computing, Imperial College London. During her Marie Curie project, called AF-Cyber, Erisa investigated the problem of attributing cyber-attacks and focused on constructing techniques and tools to help forensics analysts during cyber-forensics investigation of cyber-attacks.
Previously, she was an RA at Imperial College London and a PostDoc at the Technical University of Denmark.
Erisa obtained her PhD from the University of Verona, with a special focus on non-classical logics applied to security problems in multi-agent systems.