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Silvia Gordillo

Researcher at National University of La Plata

Publications -  104
Citations -  738

Silvia Gordillo is an academic researcher from National University of La Plata. The author has contributed to research in topics: Web application & Web modeling. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 104 publications receiving 719 citations. Previous affiliations of Silvia Gordillo include National Scientific and Technical Research Council & Citigroup.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dealing with variability in context-aware mobile software

TL;DR: This paper presents a set of design structures for solving different problems related with mobility (such as location sensing, behaviour adaptation, etc.), together with the design rationale underlying them, and shows how these sound micro-architectural constructs impact on variability.
Book ChapterDOI

From mockups to user interface models: an extensible model driven approach

TL;DR: A model-driven approach is presented that overcomes the problem of lost concepts captured in mockups by importing mockups and then transforming them into a technology-dependent model and development then begins from the imported version of the mockups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering Accessible Web Applications. An Aspect-Oriented Approach

TL;DR: This paper presents a novel approach to conceive, design and develop Accessible Web applications in an aspect-oriented manner and provides some modeling techniques that are specifically developed for handling the non-functional, generic and crosscutting characteristics of the Accessibility concerns.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Modeling and Composing Navigational Concerns in Web Applications. Requirements and Design Issues.

TL;DR: By showing how to build partial navigation scenarios with user interaction diagrams, analyzing how they crosscut and defining corresponding composition rules, this paper adds modularity to the requirements specification stage, facilitating reasoning about the requirements and a consequent tradeoff analysis to support informed decisions on architectural choices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generating a catalog of unanticipated schemas in class hierarchies using Formal Concept Analysis

TL;DR: It is shown how the discovered dependency schemas can be used not only to identify good design practices, but also to expose bad smells in design, thereby helping developers in initial reengineering phases to develop a first mental model of a system.