Marco Caccamo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marco Caccamo (* 1971 in Italy ) is an Italian computer scientist .

Caccamo studied at the University of Pisa (degree summa cum laude 1997 as computer engineer) and received his doctorate in 2002 from the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna in Pisa. He was a post-doctoral student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , where he became an Associate Professor in 2008 and Professor in 2015. Caccamo was a senior scientist at the Real Time and Embedded Systems Laboratory . He was visiting professor at the ETH Zurich and the Technical University of Munich , where he received a Humboldt Professorship in 2018 . There he is setting up an interdisciplinary institute for cyber-physical systems .

He is an expert in (safety-critical) digital networking of machines and processes, for example in industry via wireless communication. Technology is an integral part of the Internet of Things and Industry 4.0 .

He is co-editor of IEEE Transactions on Computers. In 2018 he became a Fellow of the IEEE for contributions to the theory and application of difficult real-time multi-core computing (laudation).

Fonts (selection)

  • with Giorgio Buttazzo, Giuseppe Lipari, Luca Abeni: Soft Real Time-Systems, Springer 2005
  • with L. Sha u. a .: Real time scheduling theory: A historical perspective, Real-time systems, Volume 28, 2004, pp. 101–155
  • with Lynn Y Zhang, Lui Sha, Giorgio Buttazzo: An implicit prioritized access protocol for wireless sensor networks, Proc. 23rd IEEE Real-Time Systems Symposium (RTSS), 2002, pp. 39-48
  • with G. Buttazzo a. a .: Elastic scheduling for flexible workload management, IEEE Transactions on Computers, Volume 51, 2002, pp. 289-302
  • with G. Buttazzo, L. Sha: Capacity sharing for overrun control, Proc. 21st IEEE Real-Time Systems Symposium, 2000, pp. 295-304
  • with R. Pellizzoni a. a .: Worst case delay analysis for memory interference in multicore systems, Design, Automation & Test in Europe Conference & Exhibition (DATE), 2010

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Laudation: For contributions to the theory and applications of hard real-time multicore computing .