Jump to content

Siobhán Clarke

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Siobhán Clarke is an Irish computer scientist whose research involves software engineering, aspect-oriented programming, middleware, the Internet of things, and smart cities. She is Professor of Software Systems at Trinity College Dublin, in its School of Computer Science and Statistics.[1]

Clarke has a 1986 bachelor's degree from Dublin City University.[2] She worked for IBM for ten years[3] before returning to Dublin City University for a PhD, which she completed in 2001, supervised by John Murphy.[4] She joined Trinity College Dublin in 2000.[3] She is the director of the Enable and Future Cities projects, head of Networks and Distributed Systems in the School of Computer Science and Statistics, and head of the Distributed Systems Group.[1] She is the coauthor, with Elisa Baniassad, of Aspect-oriented Analysis and Design: The Theme Approach (2005).[5]

Clarke was elected to the Royal Irish Academy in 2023.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Prof. Siobhán Clarke", School of Computer Science and Statistics, Trinity College Dublin, retrieved 2024-09-17
  2. ^ a b Members directory, Royal Irish Academy, retrieved 2024-09-17
  3. ^ a b "Siobhán Clarke, Deputy Director & Principal Investigator", Our People, CONNECT Centre, retrieved 2024-09-17
  4. ^ Composition of Object-Oriented Software Design Models (PDF) (PhD thesis), Dublin City University, January 2001, retrieved 2024-09-17
  5. ^ Clarke, Siobhán; Baniassad, Elisa (2005), Aspect-oriented Analysis and Design: The Theme Approach, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 978-0-321-24674-5; review: Hu, Chenglie (September 2005), "Review", Computing Reviews
[edit]