Metadata
Title
Centre for Cyber Security and Resilience
Category
undergraduate
UUID
46cd0740ae3b4a02b6dcf6faae98f805
Source URL
https://www.ncl.ac.uk/research/cyber-security-resilience/
Parent URL
https://www.ncl.ac.uk/undergraduate/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:31:19+00:00
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Centre for Cyber Security

and Resilience

Source: https://www.ncl.ac.uk/research/cyber-security-resilience/ Parent: https://www.ncl.ac.uk/undergraduate/

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Protecting the fabric of society

Emergent systems have a profound impact on society. They affect society’s interaction with those technologies in unprecedented ways.

This holds for the individual’s experience of the digital realm, as well as for society as a whole. We:

We aim at collaborating across faculties to create research opportunities. These include work in:

The Centre is led by its Director, Prof Thomas Gross, the Professor of System Security of the School of Computing, and a dedicated steering group, the members of which represent designated research themes introduced below.

Our research themes

The initial research themes are designed to build bridges between Newcastle research strengths and yield cross-disciplinary value.

Artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI) is a pervasive technology. It can aid all areas of our lives. Cyber security and resilience is no exception.

We can develop systems which learn to make systems more secure. AI can also benefit from cyber security and resilience. We can make AI more robust and less susceptible to attacks.

Theme lead: Dr Stephen McGough

Bio/nano systems

Our research theme will look at all aspects of bio/nano cyber security. We must secure the entire supply chain of nano-bio products and processes as:

This includes securing:

Our theme is keen to engage with a gamut of stakeholders. They represent experts on nanotechnology, biotechnology, cybersecurity.

They include industrial, government and public organisations and individuals. We gather all relevant perspectives on the future of bio/nano cyber security. That includes responsible innovation.

Theme lead: Prof Natalio Krasnagor

Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs)

Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs) are inter-connected systems that include physical components, computer control, networking and data collection, and human interactions. Examples include industrial control systems, precision agriculture, critical national infrastructure, on-body medical devices and drones. CPSs must be resilient to both cyber and physical attacks, and research is required to offer secure, resilient and, safe systems at all abstraction layers. This is not only meant to protect CPSs from threats creating a hazard for society: CPS research, in turn, infuses new thought paradigms into cyber security and resilience through the integrative modelling of the physical world and circular causality (feedback loops) of cybernetics, which give rise to autonomous and adaptive security systems.

We focus primarily on modelling and analysis as a solution to the challenge of CPSs, including how whole-system models and Digital Twins (DT) can better demonstrate resilience, how models of human performance and threats can be incorporated into these models. We will also investigate side channels and how both cyber and physical attacks can compromise CPSs, as well as how explainable trustworthy Artificial Intelligence (AI) can be used in CPSs in a way that is both verifiable and understandable.

Theme leads: Dr Ken Pierce and Dr Mujeeb Ahmed

Financial technologies

Many service firms (accounting, legal and financial) embrace big data and data analytics.

Research on Fintech applications and the effects of cyber-crime is sparse. So we're unclear about the impact on various stakeholders and firms’:

Under this theme, research and targeted grants will cluster around various sub-themes.

We'll investigate Fintech firms and financial institutions, looking at:

We aim to present international insights and key policy implications. They will reflect cross-country comparisons.

We'll use inter-disciplinary research designs, new methods and unique datasets for cyber security. They will address both conceptual and empirical contexts.

Theme lead: Dr Marwa Elnahass

Medical systems

This theme will investigate the end-to-end protection for medical systems to:

It will not only consider the cyber security and resilience of such systems. It will also investigate privacy preservation and disclosure risk mitigation on identifying or sensitive personal information.

Its scope covers:

Theme leads: Dr Jaume Bacardit and Dr Leo Freitas

Governance, law and new technologies

The vision for the stream governance, law, and new technologies is to explore the interaction between politics, international relations and law in cybersecurity research and development that places sociotechnical understandings of cybersecurity at the heart of its research.

Considering the increased role of cybersecurity in national security and economic concerns, this stream of research considers how policymakers, industry professionals, and civil society view cybersecurity, what problems they identify, and then how they then pursue legal or policy initiatives to address those cybersecurity concerns. We consider the following non-exhaustive list as indicative of the themes of this stream:

Theme lead: Dr Ben Farrand

Human identity and trust

The Human Identity and Trust cross-cutting theme seeks to promote social justice by advancing knowledge on public awareness of and engagement in cyber security issues and citizens’ experiences of cyber security threats. By examining how individuals and groups negotiate their identities online; the level of trust they invest in their online interactions; and how they navigate their online decisions, the twofold aim is to (a) prevent digital technologies from performing as sites that reflect, exacerbate, or reinscribe social inequalities through design, production, and use and (b) identify and promote ways to protect citizens’ online identities and enhance individual and community trust in digital technologies.

Potential projects and approaches

The following themes and issues are illustrations of potential projects, reflecting the cross-cutting theme’s vision:

- To identify potential interdisciplinary research projects (UK centred or cross-national studies):

To understand the social implications of current and future technologies, the aims is to foster and support a series of citizen-oriented interdisciplinary research projects between members of HASS and other Faculties to attract research grants, centred on the intersectional dimensions of cybersecurity pertaining to identity and trust, by focusing on:

a) accountability, trust, and transparency

b) the growing normalisation of dis/misinformation, surveillance, and capitalist exploitation.

c) factors of age; disability; gender; children and youth; race, and ethnic identities

d) knowledge-sharing to promote online safety in everyday life and work, by enabling individuals and organisations reduce the risk of cyber-attack.

Theme leads: Dr Tina Sikka

Responsible and sustainable innovation

Our vision for this research stream is to pioneer a new era in cyber security research and development that places ethical considerations, public trust, and environmental sustainability at the forefront.

By prioritizing ethics, ESG impact, public trust, and long-term efficacy, this stream of research ensures that cyber security solutions are not only cutting-edge but also responsible, sustainable, and capable of safeguarding individuals, organizations, and societies in an ever-changing threat landscape. We consider the following themes as examples (not limited to these):

Theme lead: Prof Marwa Elnahass

About us

Newcastle University founded its cyber security research initiative in 2010. We responded to increasing global cyber crime and the need for resilient systems. We became an Academic Centre of Excellence in Cyber Security Research (ACE-CSR) in 2013.

We pursue a holistic research vision in this area. We look at a wide range of applications, including:

The NUCoRE in Cyber Security and Resilience includes members with a wide range of expertise across faculties. Core cyber security topics are also investigated in the group Secure and Resilience Systems (SRS) of the School of Computing.

Breadth of expertise

Our Centre builds on world-leading research in dependability and formal methods. It's underpinned by rigorous quantitative and evidence-based data. But we also incorporate research in social sciences, arts and culture, business and law.

This NUCoRE benefits from Newcastle's growing strength in data science. It collaborates with NUCoRE Data, the National Innovation Centre for Data and partners with the Alan Turing Institute.

Highlighted recent projects

Newcastle Cyber Security and Resilience hosts a number of exciting research projects:

Facilities for fighting cyber crime

Cyber Security and Resilience benefits from a number of integrated, purpose-built labs and associated assets:

Join us

We offer an opportunity to collaborate with colleagues across the University. You'll benefit from the rich tapestry of expertise.

Join us to connect to colleagues, for example, from:

We have interest in cyber security and resilience in the widest sense. You are welcome, no matter whether you are a:

To join us, please contact our operations support, Angela Horend

Email us

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