Visible to the public Tokens Of Interaction: Psycho-physiological Signals, A Potential Source of Evidence of Digital Incidents

Nancy Mogire is a PhD candidate at UH Manoa’s information and computer sciences department, affiliated with the Hawaii Interdisciplinary Neurobehavioral & Technology Lab(HINTLab) and the Adaptive Security and Economics Lab(ASECOLab). Previously, she earned an MSc. in Computer Science at the department.

Nancy's dissertation work is focused on the psycho-physiological signal artifacts of human-computer interaction(HCI), and their potential applications towards solving cybersecurity problems.

Aside from research, she serves as a graduate teaching assistant in the computer science program at UH Manoa. She has spent the bulk of her TA time in courses related to computing security. However she has also TA'd a variety of other courses including Algorithms, Software Engineering and Mobile Application Design.

Outside of curricular activities, she volunteers on various organizations that promote education in science and technology, with particular interest in programs that are focused on improving the welfare of women and marginalized groups in the society. Roles she has served in this regard include: Reviewing conference paper submissions, conducting phone interviews, chairing conference sessions and assisting with event logistics.

License: 
Creative Commons 2.5
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