K
Kevin Gary
Researcher at Arizona State University
Publications - 65
Citations - 714
Kevin Gary is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social software engineering & Personal software process. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 63 publications receiving 662 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin Gary include The Catholic University of America.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Image-Guided Surgery Toolkit IGSTK: An Open Source C++ Software Toolkit
Andinet Enquobahrie,Patrick Cheng,Kevin Gary,Luis Ibanez,David G. Gobbi,Frank Lindseth,Ziv Yaniv,Stephen R. Aylward,Julien Jomier,Kevin Cleary +9 more
TL;DR: IGSTK is an open source C++ software library that provides the basic components needed to develop image-guided surgery applications and the IGSTK team is following several key strategies to build an active user community.
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Evaluation and comparison of production schedules
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a definition of a schedule and discuss potential uses for a schedule within the organization, and describe a number of different considerations that must be taken into account when assessing the quality of a scheduling, and discuss their implications for the design and implementation of scheduling systems.
Journal ArticleDOI
IGSTK: an open source software toolkit for image-guided surgery
TL;DR: IGSTK applies the open source development and delivery model to reduce the costs and risks associated with adopting this new technology, resulting in a safe, inexpensive, robust, shareable, and reusable software infrastructure.
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Agile methods for open source safety-critical software
Kevin Gary,Andinet Enquobahrie,Luis Ibanez,Patrick Cheng,Ziv Yaniv,Kevin Cleary,Shylaja Kokoori,Benjamin Muffih,John Heidenreich +8 more
TL;DR: Agile methods have matured since the academic community suggested almost a decade ago that they were not suitable for safety‐critical systems; the experiences on the image‐guided surgical toolkit project are presented as a case study for renewing the discussion.
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Usability of a Smartphone Application to Support the Prevention and Early Intervention of Anxiety in Youth
TL;DR: Evaluating the usability of a smartphone application corresponding to an indicated prevention and early intervention targeting youth anxiety showed that the app was highly and positively rated by both youth and providers, with some variations (lower ratings when errors occurred).