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Opcije pristupačnosti Pristupačnost

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Tihana Galinac Grbac is a Full Professor of computing at the University of Pula and head of Software Engineering and
Information Processing Lab (SEIP Lab). Since 2000, she worked for 8 years at Ericsson Nikola Tesla (ETK), and gained valuable
experience in numerous R&D projects developing large-scale complex software systems that are evolutionarily developed
by globally distributed teams. Her main research interests are in the field of Software and Systems Engineering with an
emphasis on System Concepts and Process Improvements related to Sustainable, Reliable, and Safe Software Systems
Operations. She was the principal investigator in research projects funded by the Croatian Science Foundation,
Bilateral and EU COST actions. She has also been actively involved in numerous strategic projects developing the Primorsko-Goranska County and the City of Rijeka applying ICT technologies. She established a Software and System Engineering conference within MIPRO platform with 40 years of tradition in the ICT field. The results of her work are continuously published in prestigious international scientific journals and conferences with more than 80 publications (indexed in Scopus). She was awarded by the IEEE Croatia Section for her achievements in knowledge application and knowledge transfer from industry to engineering education in the field of Computing. She was elected as one of the top 50 most influential women in ICT in Croatia. She is a member of IEEE and ACM.


Neven Grbac is a full professor of mathematics at the Juraj Dobrila University of Pula, Croatia. Since 1999 until 2007 he
was with the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, Croatia.
His research interests are within the field of number theory, in particular, the Langlands program. More precisely, they include, but are not limited to the theory of automorphic forms, representation theory, and cohomology of arithmetic groups.
He has published 20 research papers and has given more than 30 talks at international conferences, workshops and
seminars, including two courses at doctoral study programmes in Vienna and Zagreb, as well as three mini-courses for
doctoral and post-doctoral students at the University of Michigan and the University of Vienna. As a visiting professor, he
spent more than a year at several international research centers in Vienna, Bonn, Paris, Tokyo, Kyoto, Michigan etc.