The Mathematics of Electronic Voting
Date: 09-26-2024
Time: 02:00 PM
Location: NYS 250 Main CAS Innovation Lab Instruction Space
This is an undergraduate talk by Dr. Christelle Vincent from the University of Vermont. This talk starts a series of three colloquia centered around mathematical aspects of voting. We are excited to engage students and faculty from campus. The abstract of the first talk is given below.
Abstract: The prospect of e-voting, or electronic voting, is tantalizing: Voting for President at home, conveniently from one's phone or home computer, would alleviate some important ballot access issues and promises increased efficiency in obtaining election results quickly and accurately. However, there are significant limits to the functionality of the e-voting protocols we have available at present. To explain where these limits come from, we will introduce the basic ideas of mathematical public-key cryptography and show how mathematical objects are used to design cryptographic systems. Familiarity with modular arithmetic (addition and multiplication "modulo N") will be necessary to understand the more technical parts of the talk, but the main concepts and ideas of the talk will be accessible to people of all mathematical backgrounds.
For more information, contact Janet Striuli / 2036838283 / jstriuli@fairfield.edu