
DrSijing Zhang
- Research Institute Member, Institute for Applicable Computing and Engineering (IACE)
- Senior Lecturer in Computing & Information Systems, School of Computing Engineering and Creative Industries
Sijing Zhang obtained his B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees, both in Computer Science, from Jilin University, Changchun, China in 1982 and 1988, respectively. He earned a PhD degree in Computer Science from the University of York, UK in 1996. He then joined the Network Technology Research Centre (NTRC) of Nanyang Technological University, Singapore as a post-doctoral fellow. In 1998, he returned to the UK to work as a research fellow with the Centre for Communications Systems Research (CCSR) of the University of Cambridge. He joined the School of Computing and Technology, University of Derby, UK, as a senior lecturer in 2000. Since October 2004, he has been working as a senior lecturer in the School of Computer Science and Technology, University of Bedfordshire, UK. His research interests include wireless networking, schedulability tests for hard real-time traffic, performance analysis and evaluation of real-time communication protocols, QoS provision, vehicular ad-hoc networks, and wireless networks for real-time industrial applications.
Qualifications
Academic Qualifications
- BachelorProject: Computer Science
- MasterProject: Computer Science
- PhDProject: Computer Science
External Positions
External Positions
- Committee MemberChinese Automation and Computing Society in the UK (CACS UK)
- PhD ExaminerDe Montfort University
- reviewerIEEE Communications Letters
Metrics
All time
PlumX
Research Interests
- Real-Time Scheduling and Schedulability/Feasibility Analysis
- Real-Time Communications over LAN’s, MAN’s and VANETs
- VANET-based Real-Time Intelligent Transportation
- Network Protocol Analysis and Performance Evaluation
- QoS Provisions for Wireless Networks
- Wireless networks for real-time industrial applications
Teaching Expertise
- Computer Networks and Communication
- Real-Time Communication
- Wireless Networks
- Computer Architecture and Organisation
- Digital Circuits
