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German computer scientist and professor
Gudrun Susanne Wetzel is a German computer scientist known for her work in computer security, including the use of information channels such as voice or keystroke dynamics to strengthen password-based security, and the security of wireless communications standards including Bluetooth and GSM. She is a professor of computer science at the Stevens Institute of Technology.
Education and career[edit]Wetzel earned a diploma from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in 1993, and completed her doctorate (Dr. rer. nat.) at Saarland University in 1998.[1] Her dissertation, Lattice Basis Reduction Algorithms and their Applications, concerned lattice reduction; her doctoral advisor was Johannes Buchmann.[2]
She joined the Stevens Institute of Technology in 2002.[3] In 2017, she served a one-year term as a program director at the National Science Foundation.[3][4]
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