Timothy C. Lethbridge

Timothy Christian Lethbridge (born 1963) is a British/Canadian computer scientists and Professor of Computer Science and Software Engineering at University of Ottawa, known for his contributions in the fields of software engineering, knowledge management[2] and computer animation, and the development of Umple.[3]

Timothy C. Lethbridge
Timothy C. Lethbridge, 2013
Born1963
NationalityBritish/Canadian
Alma materUniversity of New Brunswick, University of Ottawa
Known forUmple
Scientific career
FieldsComputer Science and Software Engineering
InstitutionsUniversity of Ottawa
Doctoral advisorDoug Skuce[1]

Biography

Born in London in 1963, Lethbridge grew up in Denmead and attended St John's College in Portsmouth[4] until he immigrated with his family to Canada in 1975.[5] He received his BSc in 1985 and his MSc in 1987 in Computer Science from the University of New Brunswick. In 1994, he received his PhD in Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence from the University of Ottawa under supervision of Douglas Skuce for a thesis about tools for knowledge management,[6] entitled "Practical Techniques for Organizing and Measuring Knowledge."[1]

In 1983, still studying, he started working as programmer and analyst for the Government of New Brunswick, where he assisted in the development of software for statistics, health insurance programs, and management information applications. At the university he also taught courses in Fortran programming and Interactive Computing. After graduation in 1987 he became researcher at the Bell-Northern Research, where he developed software for Computer Aided Design applications. From 1990 to 1995 he worked as consultant in multiple research projects.

In 1994 Lethbridge started his academic career at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Ottawa as Assistant Professor, in 2001 Associate Professor, and since 2005 Professor of Computer Science and Software Engineering at the University of Ottawa.[7] He specializes in "Human Computer Interaction, Software Modeling, UML, Object Oriented Design, Software Engineering Education".[8]

Publications

Lethbridge published one textbook and over 100 articles. Books:

  • 1994. Practical Techniques for Organizing and Measuring Knowledge. phd thesis, University of Ottawa.
  • 2001. Object Oriented Software Engineering: Practical Software Development using UML and Java. With Robert Laganière. 2nd ed. 2005.

Articles, a selection:[9]

gollark: No. We can reason about problems in various ways. So can some animals.
gollark: It doesn't have its own will. It's a giant non-agent mess driven by tons of interacting blind optimization processes.
gollark: Depends. There's not a general answer which isn't vaguely stupid somehow.
gollark: It isn't useful to treat it as intelligent because it doesn't display intelligent behaviours.
gollark: It *is*, practically speaking.

References

  1. Timothy C. Lethbridge at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Du Zhang, Jeffrey J. P. Tsai (2007) Advances in Machine Learning Applications in Software Engineering. p. 461
  3. Brestovansky, Dusan. Exploring Textual Modeling using the Umple Language. Diss. University of Ottawa, 2008.
  4. Tim Lethbridge's British Background. Accessed Aug 7, 2013.
  5. Timothy C. Lethbridge: Brief Biography at site.uottawa.ca. Accessed Aug 7, 2013.
  6. Hankan Erdogmus, Oryal Tanir (2002) Advances in Software Engineering: Comprehension, Evaluation, and Evolution. p. xx
  7. LETHBRIDGE, CV Expanded at uottawa.ca. Accessed Aug 8, 2013.
  8. Timothy Lethbridge: Professor of Computer Science and Software Engineering at University of Ottawa at linkedin.com. Accessed Aug 7, 2013.
  9. Timothy Lethbridge at Google Scholar.
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