Luisanna Cocco
University of Cagliari
31 Papers
39 Citations
Luisanna Cocco is an academic researcher from University of Cagliari. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Software as a service. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 26 publications.
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Papers
Banking on Blockchain: Costs Savings Thanks to the Blockchain Technology
TL;DR: The obtained results show that by overcoming the disadvantages of the Bitcoin system, and therefore of blockchain technology, the system could be able to handle financial processes in a more efficient way than under the current system.
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A Blockchain-Based Traceability System in Agri-Food SME: Case Study of a Traditional Bakery
Luisanna Cocco,Katiuscia Mannaro,Roberto Tonelli,Lorena Mariani,Matteo Bruno Lodi,Andrea Melis,Marco Simone,Alessandro Fanti +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a blockchain based system for the supply chain management of a particular Italian bread is presented, where each actor of the chain can verify the quality of the products and the conformity to the normative about the hygienic-sanitary conditions along the chain.
Using an artificial financial market for studying a cryptocurrency market
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an agent-based artificial cryptocurrency market in which heterogeneous agents buy or sell cryptocurrencies, in particular Bitcoins, in which there are two typologies of agents, Random Traders and Chartists, which interact with each other by trading Bitcoins.
103
Modeling and Simulation of the Economics of Mining in the Bitcoin Market
Luisanna Cocco,Michele Marchesi +1 more
TL;DR: The goal of this work is to model the economy of the mining process, starting from GPU’s generation, the first with economic significance, and reproduces some “stylized facts” found in real-time price series and some core aspects of themining business.
Simulating Kanban and Scrum vs. Waterfall with System Dynamics
Luisanna Cocco,Katiuscia Mannaro,Giulio Concas,Michele Marchesi +3 more
- 10 May 2011
TL;DR: This paper analyzes the dynamic behavior of the adoption of Kanban and Scrum, versus a traditional software development process such as the Waterfall approach, using a system dynamics model based on the relationships between system variables to assess the relative benefits of the studied approaches.
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