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Daniel Graziotin
Summary
Daniel Graziotin is a full professor of information systems and digital technologies at the University of Hohenheim, Germany. He earned his PhD in computer science and software engineering from the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy. His research focuses on interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approaches, incorporating theories, methods, and measurements from social and behavioral sciences, to enhance the understanding and integration of human factors in technology development and implementation.
Prof. Dr. Daniel Graziotin is academic editor at the PeerJ Computer science journal, academic editor at the Research Ideas and Outcomes journal, editorial advisory board member at the Journal of Open Research Software, and editorial board member at the Empirical Software Engineering journal. He has also served on the organizing committees of multiple international research conferences (ICSE, ESEC/FSE, ESEM, XP, PROFES) and workshops (CHASE, SEmotion) as well as serving on dozens of program committees. He drives the open science initiative at the ACM Special Interest Group on Software Engineering (SIGSOFT) to foster the practice of open access, open data, and open source at the various research venues in software engineering.
His work has been awarded with the ACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Paper Award and Best Presentation Award in 2022, the Journal of Systems and Software Best Paper award in 2019, the Jean-Claude Guédon Prize in 2018, the European Design Award (bronze) in 2016, and the Data Journalism Award in 2015. He has been the recipient of a two-year Alexander von Humboldt (AvH) Fellowship for Postdoctoral Researchers in 2017.
Past or current institution affiliations
Work details
Full Professor
Akademischer Rat
Websites
PeerJ Contributions
Academic Editor on
Signed reviews submitted for articles published in PeerJ Note that some articles may not have the review itself made public unless authors have made them open as well.
Provided feedback on
This is a nicely written article. It is an introduction to the realization/implementation of Open Data in the research context. I think it achieves the aim. The language is simpl...
Traverse the landscape of the mind by walking: an exploration of a new brainstorming practice
I report here a feedback received from a tweet by Leif Singer. " last time I checked group brainstorming was debunked. There should be current research along those lines. Discus...