Michael Hennell

Professor Michael A. Hennell (born 9 September 1940) is a British computer scientist who has made leading contributions in the field of software testing.[1][2]

Michael Hennell is Professor Emeritus of Mathematical Sciences, University of Liverpool in England.

As part of his leading role in software testing, Hennell is a member of the editorial board of the journal Software Testing, Verification and Reliability (STVR), a major international journal in the field of software testing.[3]

Hennell's academic research was initially conducted in Nuclear physics, resulting in the use of Computational science for addressing complex nuclear mathematics.[4] Assessing the quality of the mathematical libraries on which this work depended lead Professor Hennell into the world of Software testing,[5][6][7] specifically in the use of Static code analysis for quantifying the effectiveness of test data,[8] which led to the development of the Linear Code Sequence and Jump concept.

In 1975 Professor Hennell founded Liverpool Data Research Associates Ltd. (LDRA) to commercialize the software test-bed designed to analyse numerical software.

References

  1. Michael Hennell at DBLP Bibliography Server
  2. Michael Hennell, Scientific Commons.
  3. Software Testing, Verification and Reliability, Software Testing, Verification and Reliability
  4. M.A. Hennell, An effective Hamiltonian method for the solution of the Schrodinger equation. I. The one-dimensional problem, 1975 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 8 171-17
  5. M. A. Hennell, An experimental testbed for numerical software. {I}. {Fortran}, The Computer Journal 21(4):333--336, @nov, 1978
  6. M. A. Hennell and D. Hedley, An experimental testbed for numerical software. {II}. {ALGOL 68}, The Computer Journal 22(1):53--56, @feb, 1979
  7. M.A. Hennell, M.R. Woodward and D Hedley, Towards More Advanced Testing Techniques, Workshop on Reliable Software pp. 19-29., ed. by P. Raulefs, Hanser (Munchen-Wien) 1979 ISBN 3-446-12910-3
  8. M.A. Hennell, D. Hedley and M.R. Woodward, Quantifying the Test Effectiveness of Algol 68 Programs, Proceedings of the Strathclyde ALGOL 68 conference 1977, pp. 36 - 41, ISSN 0362-1340
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