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Lectures will be loosely organized around four modules: differential privacy, cryptography, language-based security, and adversarial machine learning. I will give most of the lectures for the first module (differential privacy). For the other modules, I will give an introductory lecture surveying the topic and background material. Then, each student will lead one lecture, presenting a paper and guiding the discussion.

This is a graduate seminar, so not all lectures are set in stone and there is considerable flexibility in the topics. If you are interested in something not covered in the syllabus, please let me know!

Readings and Homework

Paper discussions are a core component of this course. You are expected to read papers before lecture, attend lectures, and participate in discussions. Before every paper presentation, students are expected to read the paper closely and understand its significance, including (a) the main problem addressed by the paper, (b) the primary contributions of the paper, and (c) how the authors solve the problem in some technical detail.

The topics we will be reading and thinking about are from the recent research literature---polished enough to be peer-reviewed and published, but not always completely refined. Most research papers focus on a very narrow topic and are written for a very specific technical audience. It also doesn't help that computer science researchers are generally not the clearest writers (though there are certainly exceptions). These notes by Srinivasan Keshav may help you get more out of reading papers.

To help you prepare for the class discussions, I will also send out a few questions at least 24 hours before every paper presentation. Before each lecture, you should send me brief answers---a short email is fine, no more than a few sentences per question. These questions are for your benefit---they are not meant to be very difficult or time-consuming and they will not be graded in detail.

Course Project

The other main component is the course project. You will work individually or in pairs on a topic of your choice, producing a conference-style write-up and presenting the project at the end of the semester. Successful projects may have the potential to turn into an eventual research paper or survey. Details can be found here.

Grading and Evaluation

Grades will be assigned as follows:

  • Discussions: 15% (Pre-lecture questions and class participation)
  • Paper presentation: 25%
  • Final project: 60% (First and second milestones, and final writeup)

Academic Integrity

The final project may be done individually or in groups of two students. Collaborative projects with people outside the class may be allowed, but please check with me first.

Access and Accommodation

The University of Wisconsin-Madison supports the right of all enrolled students to a full and equal educational opportunity. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Wisconsin State Statute (36.12), and UW-Madison policy (Faculty Document 1071) require that students with disabilities be reasonably accommodated in instruction and campus life. Reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities is a shared faculty and student responsibility. Students are expected to inform me of their need for instructional accommodations by the end of the third week of the semester, or as soon as possible after a disability has been incurred or recognized. I will work either directly with you or in coordination with the McBurney Center to identify and provide reasonable instructional accommodations. Disability information, including instructional accommodations as part of a students educational record, is confidential and protected under FERPA.