• Elizabeth (Beth) Hawthorne

    Elizabeth “Beth” Hawthorne is a professor and a cybersecurity graduate program director at Khoury College. As the founding director and curriculum developer for Rider University’s cybersecurity graduate program, she is passionate about good cybersecurity education, and she teaches courses on both cybersecurity and digital forensics.

  • Benjamin Hescott

    Benjamin Hescott is a teaching professor, and the senior associate dean of academic programs and student experience at Khoury College. His research interests include computational complexity, approximation algorithms, and computational biology, and he is passionate about making sure computer science education is accessible to all.

  • Matt Higger

    Matt Higger is an assistant teaching professor at Khoury College. He develops interfaces that allow paralyzed people to communicate efficiently with user-specific movements; he also segments populations of images to identify regions which show statistically significant relationships.

  • Ally Hoffman

    Ally Hoffman is a part-time lecturer at Khoury College, and a senior risk specialist in banking supervision at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. She researches cyber threats to the financial services industry with a particular focus on emerging technologies, and studies the role of policy and legal enforcement in the advancement of cybersecurity.

  • Megan Hofmann

    Megan Hofmann is an assistant professor at Khoury College. Her human–computer interaction and personal health informatics research often centers around the development and evaluation of accessible tools, including for people with disabilities.

  • Steve Holtzen

    Steve Holtzen is an assistant professor at Khoury College, affiliated with the Programming Research Laboratory. His research aims to design fast, accessible, and useful probabilistic modeling systems for everyday reasoning tasks, and he teaches courses on artificial intelligence, programming languages, and machine learning.

  • Richard Hoshino

    Richard Hoshino is a teaching professor at Khoury College focusing on discrete structures, algorithms, and AI. He owns the boutique math consulting firm Hoshino Math Services and is the youngest-ever recipient of the prestigious Adrien Pouliot Award for math education.