David Garlan




David Garlan is a Professor in the Institute for Software Research and the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, where he leads several research projects and is the Director of Professional Software Engineering Programs.  His research interests include:
  • software architecture
  • pervasive computing
  • self-healing systems
  • cyber-physical systems
  • applied formal methods
  • software development environments

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External Activities


Advisory Boards and Affiliations:

Distinguished Visiting Scientist, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Research Fellow of the Korean Software Engineering Center, part of National IT Industry Promotion Agency (NIPA)



Conferences

Foundations of Aspect-Oriented Lanuages (FOAL)
March 2011, Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco, Brazil

Architectures for Cyber-Physical Systems
CPS Week Pre-Conference Workshop, April 11, 2011

ICSE 2011

33rd International Conference on Software Engineering, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, May 21-28, 2011

SEAMS 2011
6th International Symposium on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems, Sponsored by ACM SIGSOFT and IEEE TCSE, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, May 23-24, 2011


Recent Keynotes

 "The Changing Face if Software Architecture -- and what it means for educators", Keynote at 23rd Annual IEEE-CS Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training (CSEET 2010), March 9-12, 2010

"Rainbow:  Engineering Support for Self-Healing Systems", Keynote at 5th International Conference on the Quality of Software Architectures (QoSA), June 2009.

Tango

September 17-19, 2010 Workshop with Cecilia Gonzalez and Somer Surgit


This page is part of David Garlan's site in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.  Use of any portion of this site to generate spam or other mass communications is forbidden.  Comments to the maintainer.  Modified:  05-Jan-2011.