Wykaz publikacji wybranego autora

Leszek Kotulski, prof. dr hab.

profesor zwyczajny

Wydział Elektrotechniki, Automatyki, Informatyki i Inżynierii Biomedycznej
WEAIiIB-kis, Katedra Informatyki Stosowanej


  • 2018

    [dyscyplina 1] dziedzina nauk inżynieryjno-technicznych / informatyka techniczna i telekomunikacja


[poprzednia klasyfikacja] obszar nauk technicznych / dziedzina nauk technicznych / informatyka


Identyfikatory Autora Informacje o Autorze w systemach zewnętrznych

ORCID: 0000-0002-0164-0048 orcid iD

ResearcherID: C-8435-2013

Scopus: 22980169200

PBN: 5e70922b878c28a04739116a

OPI Nauka Polska

System Informacyjny AGH (SkOs)




1
  • A new approach to power consumption reduction of street lighting
2
3
  • Agent framework for decomposing a graph into the equally sized subgraphs
4
  • Application of distributed graph transformations to automated generation of control patterns for intelligent lighting systems
5
6
  • Assurance of system consistency during independent creation of UML diagrams
7
  • Behavioural patterns from cellular data streams and outdoor lighting as strong allies for smart urban ecosystems
8
  • Calculating reactive power compensation for large-scale street lighting
9
  • Common graph representation of different XBRL taxonomies
10
  • Comparative study of road lighting efficiency in the context of CEN/TR 13201 2004 and 2014 lighting standards and dynamic control
11
  • Conditional synchronization in multi-agent graph-based knowledge system
12
  • Controlling complex lighting systems
13
  • Coordination of design processes in two perspectives of computer aided design
14
  • Derivation Control Environment as a tool for an efficient distributed graph transformations coordination
15
  • Distributed adaptive design with hierarchical autonomous graph transformation systems
16
  • Distributed graphs transformed by multiagent system
17
  • Economic impact of intelligent dynamic control in urban outdoor lighting
18
  • Empirical study of how traffic intensity detector parameters influence dynamic street lighting energy consumption: a case study in Krakow, Poland
19
  • Enhancing energy efficiency of adaptive lighting control
20
  • Estimation of road lighting power efficiency using graph-controlled spatial data interpretation
21
  • Evaluation of risk attributes driven by periodically changing system functionality
22
23
  • Formal methods supporting agent aided smart lighting design
24
  • Formal verification of embedded systems using the Alvis approach
25
  • Formalizing software refactoring in the distributed environment by aedNLC graph grammar