Summary
Calvin Deutschbein is an assistant professor of computer science and hardware security researcher with nine years of experience bridging academic research and industry collaboration. He earned his Ph.D. at UNC Chapel Hill studying mining-based approaches to secure hardware behavior and has translated that work into invited talks for Intel, the Semiconductor Research Corporation, and hardware-security venues like SEC-RISCV. At Willamette and prior institutions he has taught data structures, scientific computing, and introductory CS while actively mentoring students on careers and placements—a clear commitment to expanding access to computing pathways. His background includes hands-on systems work from RTOS engineering at Lockheed Martin to processor-accelerator design, giving him rare end-to-end perspective on security from silicon spec to software. Based in Portland, he combines rigorous research with practical, industry-relevant tools for finding corner-case vulnerabilities in CPU designs.
9 years of coding experience
3 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science (BS), Computer Science & Mathematics, Bachelor of Science (BS), Computer Science & Mathematics at University of Chicago
Doctorate, Computer Science, Doctorate, Computer Science at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill