Research
 

SIS Research Area - Software Systems

Overview

In the current global commercial climate, corporations are constantly subjected to on-demand, real-time and mission critical decision making scenarios. Additionally, the effects of such decisions often effected through automated or semi-automated means, need to ripple through a diverse, loosely coupled and highly interoperable set of systems comprising both intra and inter-enterprise value chains. In such scenarios, resource integration and resource sharing via Internet computing and infrastructure virtualisation assume special significance. The goal of the BSA group is to introduce research and practice oriented innovations leading to the development of technologies, solutions, methodologies and practice principles that address issues and mitigate problems faced by businesses in the kind of operating environment described above. Specifically, the BSA group addresses software architecture and system related issues that are critical for business integration, and the sharing and virtualization of resources across enterprise value chain networks.

Current Research Themes

1. Service Discovery and Composition in SOA

2. Systems Support for Multiplayer Mobile Game

3. Developing Novel Mobile and Pervasive Applications

4. Understanding and Improving Large Distributed Software Systems

5. Model Based Architectural Design

6. Specification Mining and Protocol Inference

SIS Faculty

Rajesh Krishna BALAN, Assistant Professor
Althea LIANG, Assistant Professor
David LO, Assistant Professor
Steven MILLER, Practice Professor, Dean
Benjamin GAN Kok Siew, Practice Associate Professor
Venky SHANKARARAMAN, Practice Associate Professor
Ori SASSON
, Practice Assistant Professor
LEE Yeow Leong, Lecturer
Kevin STEPPE
, Lecturer

Research Staff

LI Peipei, Research Fellow
Jacek J. SZYMCZYK
, Research Engineer

Sample of Visitors

  1. Associate Professor JASON FLINN, School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, University of Michigan (May 2007)

 

 


Last updated on 18 August, 2008 by School of Information Systems.