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Publications

Publications by Paulo Martins

2012

Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Software Development for Enhancing Accessibility and Fighting Info-exclusion, DSAI 2012, Douro Region, Portugal, July 19-22, 2012

Authors
Hadjileontiadis, LJ; Martins, P; Todd, R; Paredes, H; Rodrigues, J; Barroso, J;

Publication
DSAI

Abstract

2012

GREENBOX: a management system for used cooking oils collection

Authors
Sousa, A; Faria, J; Fernandes, H; Goncalves, R; Paredes, H; Martins, P; Barroso, J;

Publication
2012 WORLD AUTOMATION CONGRESS (WAC)

Abstract
The rapid proliferation of human population and the growth of consumption leaded to an increase of hazardous waste. This becomes a worldwide ecological and environmental challenge. According to last available statistics the estimated global municipal solid waste reached 2.02 billion tons. Unfortunately there is not only solid waste: vegetable oil, one kind of liquid waste, used in food manufacturing, is responsible for serious contamination of water resources. Its collection is profitable by recycling into biodiesel and is already regulated in some countries. However it faces several logistic issues. Major issues are related to collection delays, which lead to oil giveaway, and reduced collection [1,2]. This paper proposes a solution to some of these logistic problems introducing a system to manage cooking oil collection in order to increase collection profits. The developed system follows a defined oil collection plan in order to optimize collection routes, introducing a sensor network that triggers collection events to a central system overcoming the current collection delays and wastes. The system is being tested in a real scenario with a Portuguese cooking oil collection company.

2008

Children as active partners: strategies for collaboration in spatial tasks through Virtual Worlds

Authors
Santos, F; Fonseca, B; Morgado, L; Martins, P;

Publication
C(5) 2008: SIXTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CREATING, CONNECTING AND COLLABORATING THROUGH COMPUTING, PROCEEDINGS

Abstract
This paper, referring to a work in progress, describes functional elements of the user interface of a Virtual World that may provide an important contribution to the process by which primary teachers and pupils collaborate in negotiating spatial configurations of educational spaces (classroom, playground, set for a theatre play, etc.). We have observed this process and some of its inherent difficulties and identified requirements or the functional elements of the interface. Finally, we reflect about factors impacting children's feelings of lack of authorship and ownership of spatial configurations resulting from collaboration and how a computer system may help in this regard. This Virtual World is therefore configured to be applied in educational contexts where curricular models reflect the new childhood culture where children have an active role in the spaces where they spend most of their time, as schools that adopt the Portuguese Modern School Movement pedagogical model.

2008

Contextualization of Programming Learning: A Virtual Environment Study

Authors
Esteves, M; Fonseca, B; Morgado, L; Martins, P;

Publication
FIE: 2008 IEEE FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION CONFERENCE, VOLS 1-3

Abstract
In this paper, it is presented a study concerning about the use of the three-dimensional virtual world Second Life (SL) to visualize and contextualize the learning of computer programming. SL allows students to use avatars to create 3D objects and program their behaviours, process data, and interact with external servers, using Linden Scripting Language (LSL), a language with C-like syntax and a state machine. Scripts can execute concurrently, and several students can simultaneously work over the same object and/or script. Through action research, we explore and analyse the potential of SL for teaching-learning introductory computer programming in computer science undergraduate courses. We believe this virtual environment has potential to help students, since it presents an immediately visual feedback of the program execution.

2012

Social networks, microblogging, virtual worlds, and Web 2.0 in the teaching of programming techniques for software engineering: A trial combining collaboration and social interaction beyond college

Authors
Morgado, L; Fonseca, B; Martins, P; Paredes, H; Cruz, G; Maia, AM; Nunes, R; Santos, A;

Publication
Proceedings of the IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference, EDUCON 2012, Marrakech, Morocco, April 17-20, 2012

Abstract
With the goal of lessening barriers to the learning of advanced programming techniques, we put into place a trial which required students to get involved with online communities of programmers. Using a course assignment on software architecture styles, students had study a problem, find basis for a tentative approach, and discuss it online with programmers. The expectation was that students would find motivation for their studies from both the contact with communities of programmers, and from having to study and reflect upon their problem well enough to be able to draw the interest of members of those communities. We present the strategy we used, the developments and outcomes, and ideas for further application of this approach. © 2012 IEEE.

2012

Development of platform-independent multi-user choreographies for virtual worlds based on ontology combination and mapping

Authors
Silva, E; Silva, N; Paredes, H; Martins, P; Fonseca, B; Morgado, L;

Publication
2012 IEEE SYMPOSIUM ON VISUAL LANGUAGES AND HUMAN-CENTRIC COMPUTING (VL/HCC)

Abstract
This paper presents two contributions: (i) a system architecture capable of staging platform-independent choreographies within different virtual worlds, and (ii) an ontology-based solution for capturing and representing multi-user choreographies with reduced time/effort. We argue that choreographies for virtual worlds should be clearly separated from the technical characteristics of their execution in virtual world technological platforms. Due to the heterogeneity of the various virtual worlds and their domain requirements, we propose exploiting the modularity, generality, and granularity dimensions of ontologies to simplify and empower the choreography modeling capabilities. Instead of a unique ontology, several ontologies with different levels of generality and granularity can be progressively combined to support the modeling requirements of a given choreography. Because these ontologies are aligned with the ontology of each specific virtual world platform, the mapping and transformation between the core ontology is simplified and automated, thus reducing the development and time-to-market.

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