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Research Seminar - March 10, 2003
Integrating Formal Methods
Graeme Smith
Software Verification Research Centre
University of Queensland
2pm Monday 10th March, 2003
Computer Science & Software Engineering
Seminar Room 1.24
Abstract:
Formal methods is a field comprising a
range of techniques for mathematically modelling, analysing and
assisting the development of software and software-based systems. Most
existing techniques focus on one aspect of such systems such as data
structures and their manipulation, or concurrency and distribution, or
real-time constraints. Real systems, however, generally have a
combination of these aspects and, consequently, there is a growing
research trend in integrating various formal methods.
This seminar will present an overview of approaches to integrating formal
methods, and focus on the speaker's work on semantic integration. A simple
case study will be used to demonstrate how formal languages for modelling
data, concurrency and real-time can be integrated in one model while
still allowing existing analysis techniques and tools to be used.
Biography: In addition to his work on integrating formal methods, Graeme
Smith is one of the originators of the Object-Z formal modelling
language: one of the first formal languages incorporating object
orientation. He is author of the first and most comprehensive book on
Object-Z (The Object-Z Specification Language, Kluwer Academic
Publishers, 2000).
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