Lorie M. Liebrock, PhD
- lorie.liebrock@nmt.edu
- 575-835-6729
- Cramer 132A
Dr. Lorie M. Liebrock is the Director of the 色狐入口 Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NMCCoE). Dr. Liebrock reports to the Vice President of Academic Affairs and works closely on economic development with the Executive Director of the NMT Office of Innovation Commercialization. Her work with the NMCCoE leads projects including a Summer Institute with Sandia National Laboratories, an expansion project for Codebreaker Challenge, and an economic development project to help 色狐入口 companies prepare for Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification. She is a Professor of Computer Science and Engineering and is the principal investigator for NMT's NSF-funded Scholarship for Service Program in which she has mentored over 60 students who have gone on to government service in security. Dr. Liebrock has extensive experience in cybersecurity, as well as parallel and high performance computing. She has published twenty-six journal articles, thirty-nine conference and workshop papers, and holds two US patents. Her research includes enterprise-wide cybersecurity, foundations of computer science, information assurance, parallel processing, and visualization with a focus on complex problems that require the integration of many aspects of computer science. This provides many student research opportunities, as she integrates students in all of her research - from freshmen to Ph.D. candidates. Dr. Liebrock holds both M.S. and Ph.D. in Computer Science from Rice University and B.S. and M.S. in Computer Science from Michigan Technological University.
- Ph.D. Computer Science, Rice University, September 1994, Dissertation Title: Using
Problem Topology in Parallelization,
Co-advisors: Dr. Jack Dongarra and Dr. Ken Kennedy - M.S. Computer Science, Rice University, May 1992
- M.S. Computer Science, Michigan Technological University, May 1988
- B.S. Computer Science, Honors, Michigan Technological University, May 1985
- Assoc. General Studies, Highest Honors, Delta College, December 1981
- Psychology of Cybersecurity (with Mark Samuels)
- Digital Forensics
- Computer Architecture
- Compiler Writing
- Parallel Processing
- Visualization
- 鈥淒etecting Anomalous Behavior Via User Authentication Graphs鈥, Alexander Kent, Joshua Neil, and Lorie Liebrock, US Patent Serial No. S133191, NMT and LANL, March 2016, US Patent Serial No. 10,015,175, July 3, 2018.
- 鈥淢ultiprocessor Parallel Computer Architecture Using a Parallel Machine with Topology-Based Mapping of Composite Grid Applications鈥, US Patent Serial No. 5,737,623, 1998
Dr. Lorie M. Liebrock's research interests focus on issues related to cybersecurity. She works with numerous students on a variety of issues in cybersecurity from analysis of impact of legal and policy changes on organizations, to metrics for determining the effectiveness of classifiers on applied problems, to forensics, enterprise-wide cybersecurity, and emulytics. Her approach to cybersecurity research integrates the transdisciplinary breadth of cybersecurity - from computer science, to policy, to psychology.
She has also done significant research in parallel computing. One long term focus is on using problem topology during compilation. In particular, the use of topology to automate data distribution and allow application of regular application optimizations to partially regular problems. She has developed algorithms for automatic distribution of irregularly coupled regular mesh (a.k.a. composite grid or multiblock) problems, e.g., aircraft aerodynamics and water-cooled nuclear reactor simulations, via the use of problem topology. For use with these automatic distribution algorithms, she has developed a program template and a set of style guidelines for these applications that allow automatic transformation of an application code with no notion of data distribution into a standard High Performance Fortran program with complete distribution specification.
The Randolph Computer Science Education Program focuses on making computer science more engaging for learners from middle school through college across many learning styles (readers, listeners, visual learners, and hands-on learners).
If you wish to request a recommendation, clearance reference, confirmation of employment or other release of information, you must provide written authorization. Complete the attached form including if you do not want to place restrictions on what information is provided, you must explicitly state that. After you complete and sign the form, send your request via email to Lorie Liebrock with other appropriate documents such as your resume, transcript, etc.