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Jens Dietrich

Researcher at Victoria University of Wellington

Publications -  100
Citations -  1849

Jens Dietrich is an academic researcher from Victoria University of Wellington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Java & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 89 publications receiving 1560 citations. Previous affiliations of Jens Dietrich include Massey University.

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Book ChapterDOI

ContractLog: an approach to rule based monitoring and execution of service level agreements

TL;DR: A rule based approach to SLA representation and management is evolved which allows separating the contractual business logic from the application logic and enables automated execution and monitoring of SLA specifications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the Shape of Circular Dependencies in Java Programs

TL;DR: In package dependency graphs, most circular dependencies are "package local": they are confined to branches of the package containment tree where they form around parent packages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rule-based agents for the semantic web

TL;DR: This paper discusses a general architecture for rule-based agents and how it can be realized with the help of semantic web languages and shows how such agents can go live on the web by presenting an implementation in Mandarax, a Java rule platform.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the recall of static call graph construction in practice

TL;DR: This work has studied call graph construction on a set of 31 real-world Java programs using an oracle of actual program behaviour recorded from executions of built-in and synthesised test cases with high coverage, measured the recall that is being achieved by various static analysis algorithms and configurations, and investigated which language features lead to static analysis false negatives.
Book ChapterDOI

Use cases for abnormal behaviour detection in smart homes

TL;DR: This paper describes a set of scenarios and the possible outputs that the smart home could give and introduces the SHMUC Repository of Smart Home Use Cases, which can consider how probabilistic and logic-based reasoning systems would produce different capabilities.