Balasubramaniam Ramesh
Professor
Computer Information Systems
J. Mack Robinson College of Business
Georgia State University
Room: 903, RCB Building
Phone: 404-413-7372
E-Mail: bramesh@gsu.edu
Personal Web Page:


EDUCATION:

Ph.D., New York University
M.Phil., New York University
P.G.D.M. (M.B.A.), Indian Institute of Management
B.Engg., University of Madras, India

SPECIALIZATIONS:
Software engineering
Computer supported collaborative work
Knowledge based system
Requirements engineering and traceability

Ramesh’s research focuses on the development of knowledge representation and reasoning models for a variety of planning and design problems such as requirements engineering and traceability in systems development, business process redesign, and concurrent product development.

Ramesh's research interests include the design of computer-based systems for collaborative work, software process improvement and decision support systems. His research has appeared in several leading conferences and journals including the IEEE Transactions of Software Engineering, Annals of Operations Research, Annals of Software Engineering and IEEE Expert. Models and techniques developed by him have been incorporated in several leading computer-aided software engineering tools. His research has been funded by several prestigious government and industry sources.


PUBLICATIONS:
  • B. Ramesh and M. Jarke, "Towards Reference Models for Requirements Traceability". IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, 2000 (forthcoming)..
  • Ramesh and Amrit Tiwana, "Supporting Collaborative Process Knowledge Management in New Product Development Teams," Decision Support Systems Vol. 27, 1999. pp. 213-235.
  • B. Ramesh. "Factors Influencing Requirements Traceability Practice", Communications of the ACM, pp. 37-44, December 1998.
  • B. Ramesh, "Representing and Reasoning with Traceability in Model Life Cycle Management," Annals of Operations Research, Vol. 54, pp. 123-145, 1997.
  • B. Ramesh, C. Stubbs, T. Powers, and M. Edwards, "Requirements Traceability: Theory and Practice," Annals of Software Engineering, vol. 3, pp. 397-415, 1997.