Paritosh Pandya

Paritish K. Pandya
Born India
Residence Mumbai, India
Nationality Indian
Institutions Oxford University Computing Laboratory, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Academic advisors Mathai Joseph
Known for DCVALID[1]
Influences Tony Hoare

Paritosh K. Pandya is an Indian computer scientist based at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) in Mumbai, India.

Paritosh Pandya studied for a BE degree in Electronics at the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda (1980), MTech degree in Computer Science at IIT Kanpur (1982), and a PhD in Computer Science at Bombay University/TIFR (1988).[2]

From 1988, Paritosh Pandya has held academic posts at TIFR.[2] He was a researcher at the Oxford University Computing Laboratory in England during 1989–91, on leave from TIFR, undertaking research with Jonathan Bowen, Jifeng He, and Tony Hoare, amongst others, as part of the ESPRIT ProCoS project on "Provably Correct Systems". He then returned to TIFR, where he has spent most of his career. Pandya leads the Theoretical Computer Science Group there.

Pandya's main research interest is in the area of formal methods, including real-time systems. He has been especially involved with research concerning Duration Calculus, including the DCVALID model-checking tool.[1] His most cited paper, "Finding Response Times in a Real-Time System", with over 900 citations on Google Scholar,[3] was joint work with Mathai Joseph, published in The Computer Journal in 1986.[4]

Paritosh Pandya has been a member of the Editorial Board for the Formal Aspects of Computing journal published by Springer.[5]

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