Track 1. Ubiquitous Computing.- Track 2. Networks and Information Systems.- Track 3. Multimedia and Visualization.- Track 4. Middleware and Operating Systems.- Track 5. Security and Privacy.- Track 6. Data Mining and Artificial Intelligence.- Track 7. Software Engineering.- Track 8. Web Technology.- Track 9. Internet of Things.
Kuinam J. Kim is a professor and chairman of the Convergence Security Department, Kyonggi University, Korea. He is the Founding Editor-in-Chief of the ICAT Transactions on Convergence IT Security and serves on the advisory editorial board of the Convergence Security Journal. He is also President of the Korea Industry Security Forum and Korea Convergence Security Association.
His research interests include cloud computing, wireless and mobile computing, digital forensics, video surveillance, and convergence security. He has published extensively in these areas and received several best paper awards from journals and conferences.
He received his B.S. in Mathematics from the University of Kansas (www.ku.edu) and his Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering from Colorado State University (1994). He is currently professor at convergence security department, Kyonggi University.
Hye-Young Kim has been a professor at the School of Games, Hongik University, South Korea since 2007. She received her B.Sc. and M.S. degrees in Computer Science from Sookmyung University, and her Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering from Korea University, South Korea in 2005. Her research interests include network traffic modeling, load balancing algorithms for the Internet of things, and wireless networks.
This book presents selected papers from the 10th International Conference on Information Science and Applications (ICISA 2019), held on December 16–18, 2019, in Seoul, Korea, and provides a snapshot of the latest issues regarding technical convergence and convergences of security technologies. It explores how information science is at the core of most current research as well as industrial and commercial activities.
The respective chapters cover a broad range of topics, including ubiquitous computing, networks and information systems, multimedia and visualization, middleware and operating systems, security and privacy, data mining and artificial intelligence, software engineering and web technology, as well as applications and problems related to technology convergence, which are reviewed and illustrated with the aid of case studies. Researchers in academia, industry, and at institutes focusing on information science and technology will gain a deeper understanding of the current state of the art in information strategies and technologies for convergence security.