I am a tenured assistant professor in the Applied and Provable Security group at TU Eindhoven. I currently hold a personal Veni grant from NWO and an Irène Curie Fellowship.
My research focuses on mitigating the threat posed by quantum computers to how we communicate sensitive data. (Wiring money, transmitting sensitive information like medical data or company/governmental/military secrets, Whatsapp, …) One achievement I’m very exited about is that my research contributed to the theoretical groundwork for Kyber (now ML-KEM/FIPS 203), an emerging NIST standard for public-key encryption. This was recently recognized with the TCC Test of Time award 2025.
My methods combine techniques from provable security with developing new theoretical tools based in quantum information theory. To learn more about my research, take a look at my publications and talks and my other scientific activities.
Before joining TU/e, I completed my PhD in the Cryptology group at Bochum’s gorgeous Ruhr University, supervised by Eike Kiltz and partially funded by the Prometheus project. Before that, I studied Mathematics at the University Duisburg Essen and completed a three-year training as mathematical-technical system engineer at RWTH Aachen.
