Person
LEONARDI Letizia
Communications
Attachment (CV)
Curriculum Vitae
(Last update June 15, 2025)
Letizia Leonardi received the Ph.D. in Electronics and Computer Science from University of Bologna in December 1989, with a thesis titled: "The object paradigm: problems and solutions" (in italian). Currently (from 11/1/2002), she is a Full Professor at the Department of Engineering “Enzo Ferrari” (Dipartimento di Ingegneria “Enzo Ferrari”) of the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia.
She teaches basic and advanced computer science courses: in particular, she teaches Operating Systems in the "Corso di Laurea in Ingegneria Informatica" and Operating System Principles in "Corso di Laurea Magistrale in Ingegneria Informatica". Moreover, in July 2013 she has been re-elected as "Presidente del Consiglio Interclasse di Ingegneria Informatica".
She was the supervisor of seven PhD students, that achieved their title in February 2000, in April 2004, in February 2006, in February 2008, in February 2010, in February 2012 and in March 2021 [PhD in conjunction with Alstom (Bologna)].
Her main research activities are in the following areas:
• Smart and Digital Factories in Industry 4.0.
• Mobile agents: basic models and coordination protocols.
• Object-oriented models, languages and environments.
• Parallelism and distribution issues, specially applied to object systems.
• Design and implementation of parallel object environments on distributed, massively parallel and heterogeneous architectures.
Within these areas, she has published more than 150 papers in national and international journals and national and international conference proceedings, and she takes (and has taken) part to several Italian and International projects.
Letizia Leonardi makes regularly technical reviews of books and papers for journals and conferences at both national and international levels.
It will no longer be in service from 1 October 2025.
For more details please see the page https://unimore.unifind.cineca.it/get/person/014354
Letizia Leonardi received the Ph.D. in Electronics and Computer Science from University of Bologna in December 1989, with a thesis titled: "The object paradigm: problems and solutions" (in italian). Currently (from 11/1/2002), she is a Full Professor at the Department of Engineering “Enzo Ferrari” (Dipartimento di Ingegneria “Enzo Ferrari”) of the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia.
She teaches basic and advanced computer science courses: in particular, she teaches Operating Systems in the "Corso di Laurea in Ingegneria Informatica" and Operating System Principles in "Corso di Laurea Magistrale in Ingegneria Informatica". Moreover, in July 2013 she has been re-elected as "Presidente del Consiglio Interclasse di Ingegneria Informatica".
She was the supervisor of seven PhD students, that achieved their title in February 2000, in April 2004, in February 2006, in February 2008, in February 2010, in February 2012 and in March 2021 [PhD in conjunction with Alstom (Bologna)].
Her main research activities are in the following areas:
• Smart and Digital Factories in Industry 4.0.
• Mobile agents: basic models and coordination protocols.
• Object-oriented models, languages and environments.
• Parallelism and distribution issues, specially applied to object systems.
• Design and implementation of parallel object environments on distributed, massively parallel and heterogeneous architectures.
Within these areas, she has published more than 150 papers in national and international journals and national and international conference proceedings, and she takes (and has taken) part to several Italian and International projects.
Letizia Leonardi makes regularly technical reviews of books and papers for journals and conferences at both national and international levels.
It will no longer be in service from 1 October 2025.
For more details please see the page https://unimore.unifind.cineca.it/get/person/014354
Research Outputs (138)
Awards and honors
Best paper award at 2003 Symposium on Applications and the Internet,
conferred by 2003 Symposium on Applications and the Internet - 2003
No Results Found