Professor Alistair Barros

Find Alistair Barros on

Chief Investigator

PhD (University of Queensland)

Alistair Barros is Head of School and Academic Program Leader of Service Science at QUT’s School of Information Systems at the Faculty of Science, QUT. He has a PhD from the University of Queensland and ICT experience across academic and industry organisations, including being Global Research Leader at SAP AG.

Alistair's research focus is on the design, evolution, interoperability and optimisation of enterprise systems through contemporary cyber-physical settings - enabled by Cloud, Industrial Internet-of-Things and Blockchain platforms. His research interests include service computing methods and techniques applied to: software architectures and microservices; business process management; model-based systems re-engineering; and distributed service optimisation and coordination. His work previously applied to service industries in banking and public sector, and has extended to cyber-physical domains including construction, manufacturing, and supply chains.

Alistair has published 140+ articles, which include 6 edited books, and 120 peer-reviewed journals, conference and book chapter articles. He also has 17 filed US patents. In terms of research publication metrics, he has a h-index of 31 and his articles have attracted 9,224 citations, according to Google Scholar. Among his publication highlights are: the “Workflow Patterns” article, which is the most cited in the Business Process Management (BPM) field; and the “Service Interaction Patterns” which won the “Test of Time” award at international BPM 2015 conference for highest impact BPM 2005-6 paper over ten years.

Alistair has led Australian Research Council, Cooperative Research Centre, EU Framework Program 6, German BMBF and direct industry funded projects. His impacts include: co-authorship of the Business Process Management Notation 2.0 standard; contributions to SAP's Netweaver BPM and Exchange Infrastructure products; business and solution architecture contributions for Federal Government Department of Human Services $1.6b WPIT project; and the TeachConnect platform which won the Wharton Re-Imagining Education Award (Gold category for Asia Pacific Region).

Additional information

Title
Re-Engineering Enterprise Systems for Microservices in the Cloud
Primary fund type
CAT 1 - Australian Competitive Grant
Project ID
DP190100314
Start year
2019
Keywords
Title
Legacy2Service: A Novel, Model-Driven Technique for Re-engineering On-Demand, Software Services out of Legacy Applications
Primary fund type
CAT 1 - Australian Competitive Grant
Project ID
DP140103788
Start year
2014
Keywords
Service-oriented architecture; Software re-engineering; Software-as-a-service
Title
Transforming Banking Service Delivery Through Connected Communities
Primary fund type
CAT 1 - Australian Competitive Grant
Project ID
LP140101062
Start year
2014
Keywords
Community; Service Delivery; Banking
Title
Collaboration with Beijing Jiaotong University to build Australia-China research-industry collaboration in service and process innovation
Primary fund type
CAT 1 - Australian Competitive Grant
Project ID
ACSRF01226
Start year
2012
Keywords
Business Process Management; Service Engineering