Steve Reeves (computer scientist)

Steve Reeves
Born31 October 1957 (1957-10-31) (age 67)
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Birmingham
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science, software engineering, formal methods
InstitutionsUniversity of Waikato, University of Essex, Queen Mary, University of London

Steve Reeves is a computer scientist based at the University of Waikato in New Zealand.[1] He has been in the various roles of Associate Dean, Programme Co-ordinator and Head of Department of Software Engineering.[2] He has undertaken research work on the Z notation, formal methods for GUI design, a general theory of refinement and logic for veracity.

Steve Reeves' academic work is in the area of formal methods to aid software engineering. In particular, he has undertaken research into the design and use of logics for specification. With Prof. Martin Henson, he has studied the formal semantics of the Z notation in detail,[3] in relation to the international ISO standard for Z.[4]

He has done work (initially with colleagues from Data61) on uses for blockchain. He has had a two seed grants awarded by the New Zealand Science for Technological Innovation fund SfTI.

More recently he has developed a logic for veracity, also under the SfTI scheme, but this time as part of a multi-university Spearhead grant Veracity project.

Reeves has delivered talks internationally, including as the opening talk in the BCS-FACS seminar series at the British Computer Society in London in 2005.[5]

Steve Reeves is currently Chair of the (somewhat defunct) Z User Group, and the New Zealand member of the Australasian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC) Steering Committee and the Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference (APSEC), held at Waikato in December 2016 [1]. He is a Fellow of the British Computer Society, a Fellow of the Institute of IT Professionals (formerly the New Zealand Computer Society), and is a Chartered IT Professional (CITPNZ).

Reeves has published a number of academic papers.[6]

  1. ^ Steve Reeves Personal Web Page, Department of Computer Science, University of Waikato, New Zealand.
  2. ^ People: Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, University of Waikato, New Zealand.
  3. ^ Martin Henson, The Standard Logic of Z is Inconsistent, Formal Aspects of Computing, Volume 10, Number 3, 243–247, 1998. doi:10.1007/s001650050014.
  4. ^ Information Technology — Z Formal Specification Notation — Syntax, Type System and Semantics, ISO/IEC 13568:2002, ISO, 2002.
  5. ^ Past events: 2005, BCS-FACS, UK.
  6. ^ Steve Reeves, Scientific Commons.