
Registered user since Wed 24 Feb 2021
Wesley K. G. Assunção is an Associate Professor with the Department of Computer Science at North Carolina State University, USA. Previously, Wesley was a University Assistant in the Institute of Software Systems Engineering at Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria (2021-2023); a Postdoctoral Researcher at Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2019-2023); and an Associate Professor at Federal University of Technology - Paraná, Brazil (2013-2020). He obtained his MSc (2012) and PhD (2017) in Computer Science at Federal University of Paraná, also in Brazil. His main research interests are software modernization, variability management, software quality, model-driven engineering, collaboration in systems engineering, software testing, and application of AI/ML to support software development. Wesley has collaborated with industries, government agencies, practitioners, and researchers from several countries, such as Brazil, Austria, the USA, Spain, Canada, Germany, and France, to cite some. He is currently co-editor of the In Practice track at the Journal of Systems and Software and has also been serving as a reviewer for multiple conferences and journals, and as organizer of conferences, symposiums, workshops, competitions, and meetings. Further information: https://wesleyklewerton.github.io
Contributions
2025
EASE
- Short papers & Emerging results Co-Chair in Program Committee within the Short Papers, Emerging Results-track
- Relating Complexity, Explicitness, Effectiveness of Refactorings and Non-Functional Requirements: A Replication Study
- Panelist in Expert Panel within the Doctoral Symposium-track
- Seamless Data Migration between Database Schemas with DAMI-Framework: An Empirical Study on Developer Experience
- Do’s and Don’ts When Performing Doctoral Studies
- Short papers & Emerging results Co-Chair in Organizing Committee
- Committee Member in Doctoral Symposium within the Doctoral Symposium-track
- Assessing the Bug-Proneness of Refactored Code: A Longitudinal Multi-Project Study
- Session Chair of Maintenance (part of Short Papers, Emerging Results)