Pub. period:1985-2004
Pub. count:7
Number of co-authors:3
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Kenneth C. Cox:5Gruia-Catalin Roman's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Kenneth C. Cox:8 Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.
-- Alfred North Whitehead
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
Handorean, Radu, Gill, Christopher D. and Roman, Gruia-Catalin (2004): Accommodating Transient Connectivity in Ad Hoc and Mobile Settings. In: Ferscha, Alois and Mattern, Friedemann (eds.) PERVASIVE 2004 - Pervasive Computing, Second International Conference April 21-23, 2004, Vienna, Austria. pp. 305-322.
Cox, Kenneth C. and Roman, Gruia-Catalin (1994): A Characterization of the Computational Power of Rule-based Visualization. In J. Vis. Lang. Comput., 5 (1) pp. 5-27.
Roman, Gruia-Catalin and Cox, Kenneth C. (1993): A Taxonomy of Program Visualization Systems. In IEEE Computer, 26 (12) pp. 11-24.
Cox, Kenneth C. and Roman, Gruia-Catalin (1992): Abstraction in Algorithm Animation. In: Proceedings of the 1992 IEEE Workshop on Visual Languages September 15-18, 1992, Seattle, Washington, USA. pp. 18-24.
Cox, Kenneth C. and Roman, Gruia-Catalin (1991): Visualizing Concurrent Computations. In: VL 1991 1991. pp. 18-24.
Roman, Gruia-Catalin and Cox, Kenneth C. (1989): A Declarative Approach to Visualizing Concurrent Computations. In IEEE Computer, 22 (10) pp. 25-36.
Roman, Gruia-Catalin (1985): A Taxonomy of Current Issues in Requirements Engineering. In IEEE Computer, 18 (4) pp. 14-23.
Pub. period:1985-2004
Pub. count:7
Number of co-authors:3
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Kenneth C. Cox:5Gruia-Catalin Roman's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Kenneth C. Cox:8 Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.
-- Alfred North Whitehead
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !