Current team

Maurizio Casoni is an associate professor of telecommunications in the Department of Engineering Enzo Ferrari (DIEF) at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (UNIMORE), Italy. He received his M.S. with honors and his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Bologna, Italy, in 1991 and 1995, respectively. In 1995 he was with the Computer Science Department at Washington University in St. Louis, MO, as a research fellow. He has been responsible at UNIMORE for the EU FP7 Projects E-SPONDER and PPDR-TC. His institutional page can be found here.
Carlo Augusto Grazia received his Ph.D. in ICT from UNIMORE in 2016. He is currently a tenure-track assistant professor at DIEF in UNIMORE, where he teaches “Automotive Connectivity” in the M.S. of Electronic Engineering for Intelligent Vehicles, Computer Engineering, and Electronics Engineering. His research interests are in computer networking, with an emphasis on queueing algorithms and V2X. His institutional page can be found here.
Martin Klapez received his Ph.D. in ICT from UNIMORE in 2017, and he is currently an assistant professor at DIEF in UNIMORE. He has collaborated with the Italian nanoscience National Research Center S3, and he has been involved in the EU FP7 Project PPDR-TC. His research interests verge around network softwarization and public safety networks, including safety-related V2X systems. His institutional page can be found here.

Former collaborators

Luca Antonio Rold received his M.S. from UNIMORE in 2018, with a thesis on the performance of SDN controllers. He has been a NetLab research fellow, working on V2X communications in close contact with Alstom SA. His personal page can be found here.
Natale Patriciello received his M.S. with honors from the University of Bologna (Italy) in 2013, and his Ph.D. in ICT from UNIMORE (Italy) in 2017. He has been involved in the EU FP7 Project PPDR-TC. His research interests are in the areas of computer networking and theoretical computer science. He is active in the development of the ns-3 network simulator and follows closely the Linux kernel networking stack evolution, with an emphasis on the TCP module. Natale Patriciello is currently a senior software engineer at Vonage. His personal page can be found here.
Matteo Fiorani received his Ph.D. in ICT from UNIMORE in 2014. He is author of more than 40 research papers published in leading international journals and conference proceedings. He also holds two documented technology transfers toward Ericsson Research and one ongoing IPR application. He was involved in several European and National (Italian and Swedish) research projects. He is currently at Ericsson Research. His personal page can be found here.