C
Contributors to the Study
PARTICIPANTS IN THE JULY 2004 NRC WORKSHOP ON ELECTRONIC VOTING
Dick Thornburgh (workshop chair)
R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology
Faye Anderson, Consultant
Stephen Ansolabehere, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Henry Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Doug Chapin, Electionline.org
David Chaum, DigiCash Inc.
Kevin Chung, AVANTE International Technology, Inc.
Dana DeBeauvoir, Travis County, Texas
Jim Dickson, American Association of People with Disabilities
David L. Dill, Stanford University
Eric Fischer, Congressional Research Service
Susan Inman, Little Rock, Arkansas
Wendy Kellogg, IBM
Linda Lamone, State of Maryland
Martha Mahoney, University of Miami School of Law
Gary McIntosh, McIntosh Election Services
Sanford Morganstein, Populex Corporation
Ian Piper, Diebold, Inc.
Sharon Priest, The Downtown Partnership
Ronald Rivest, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Scott Robertson, Drexel University
Aviel Rubin, Johns Hopkins University
Ted Selker, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Shamos, Carnegie Mellon University
Thomas Sheridan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Joseph Smialowski, Fleet Boston Financial
Peter Weinberger, Google Inc.
John T. Willis, Bowie and Jensen
BRIEFERS AND PRESENTERS TO THE COMMITTEE, DECEMBER 9, 2004
Jim Adler, VoteHere, Inc.
Kim Alexander, California Voter Foundation
Tom Auriemma, New Jersey State Division of Gaming Enforcement
Ren Bucholz, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Drew Dean, SRI
Herb Deutsch, IEEE Committee on Voting Equipment Standards
Rick Hasen, Loyola Law School
David Jefferson, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Douglas Jones, University of Iowa
Linda Lamone, Maryland State Board of Elections
Eric Lazarus, DecisionSmith
Linda Lindberg, General Registrar, Arlington County
Rebecca Mercuri, Association for Computing Machinery
Peter Neumann, SRI
Scott Scherer, Nevada Gaming Control Board
Nancy Tate, League of Women Voters
Dan Tokaji, Ohio State University
Rebecca Vigil-Giron, New Mexico Secretary of State, National Association of Secretaries of State
David Wagner, University of California, Berkeley
BRIEFERS AND PRESENTERS TO THE COMMITTEE, APRIL 22, 2005
Neil McClure, Hart InterCivic
Ron Rivest, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
LIST OF WHITE PAPERS RECEIVED BY THE COMMITTEE1
The Need for Transparent, Accountable, and Verifiable U.S. Elections, Kim Alexander, California Voter Foundation
Privacy Issues in an Electronic Voting Machine, Arthur Keller, David Mertz, Joseph Lorenzo Hall, and Arnold Urken
A PC-Based Open-Source Voting Machine with an Accessible Voter-Verifiable Paper Ballot, Arthur Keller et al., Open Voting Consortium
Preliminary Analysis of E-Voting Problems Highlights Need for Heightened Standards and Testing, Deirdre Mulligan and Joseph Lorenzo Hall, University of California, Berkeley
Electronic Voting Machines and the Standards-Setting Process, Eddan Katz and Rebecca Bolin, Yale University School of Law
Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology, Excerpt: Election Problem Cases as of Novermber 25, 2004, Peter G. Neumann, SRI International
Putting People First: The Importance of User-Centered Design and Universal Usability to Voting Systems, Sharon Laskowski, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and Whitney Quesenbery, Whitney Interactive Design LLC
Accessibility and Auditability in Electronic Voting, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Electronic Voting, David Dill and Will Doherty, Verified Voting Foundation
Electronic Voting Machines in South Carolina, Duncan Buell and Carter Bays, University of South Carolina
The Need for Usability of Electronic Voting Systems: Questions for Voters and Policy Makers, ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI), U.S. Public Policy Committee
Voting, Vote Capture and Vote Counting Symposium: Electronic Voting Best Practices, Jean Camp, Allan Friedman, and Warigia Bowman, Harvard University, John F. Kennedy School of Government
Making Each Vote Count: A Research Agenda for Electronic Voting, report of a AAAS workshop on electronic voting, October 2004
Electronic Voting Systems: The Good, the Bad, and the Stupid, Barbara Simons
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These papers are available in their entirety at http://www7.nationalacademies.org/cstb/project_evoting.html#papers. |