scispace - formally typeset
C

Carlo Ghezzi

Researcher at Polytechnic University of Milan

Publications -  307
Citations -  10060

Carlo Ghezzi is an academic researcher from Polytechnic University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Software system & Software development. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 304 publications receiving 9640 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlo Ghezzi include University of L'Aquila.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A unified high-level Petri net formalism for time-critical systems

TL;DR: A high-level Petri net formalism-environment/relationship (ER) nets-which can be used to specify control, function, and timing issues-is introduced and time can be modeled via ER nets by providing a suitable axiomatization.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Model evolution by run-time parameter adaptation

TL;DR: An approach is discussed that addresses models that deal with non-functional properties, such as reliability and performance by keeping models alive at run time and feeding a Bayesian estimator with data collected from the running system, which produces updated parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

A journey to highly dynamic, self-adaptive service-based applications

TL;DR: This article evaluates the progress in software technologies and methodologies that led to the service concept and SOA and discusses how the evolution of the requirements, and in particular business goals, influenced the progress towards highly dynamic self-adaptive systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-adaptive software needs quantitative verification at runtime

TL;DR: Self-adaptation decisions taken by critical software in response to changes in the operating environment are verified to provide real-time information about how the software has changed over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

TRIO: A logic language for executable specifications of real-time systems

TL;DR: The need for a formal specification language for real-time applications and for a support environment providing tools for reasoning about formal specifications is motivated and TRIO, a logic-based specification language, is introduced.