Enrique Maldonado Belmonte has a Computer Science degree (2004) from the University of Salamanca. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. degree at the University of Alcalá. He works as a specialist engineer in health information systems at the General Hospital Gregorio Marañón, in charge of integration architecture and interoperability between systems. His main research interests include e-health, integration and interoperability architectures, big data, and artificial intelligence.
Salvador Otón Tortosa has a Computer Sciences Engineering degree from the University of Murcia (1996) and a PhD from the University of Alcalá (2006). Currently, he is an Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department of the University of Alcalá. He coordinates the Master on Agile Software Development for the Web. He is the coordinator of the European project EduTech, which is concerned with accessible virtual education, granted by the Erasmus+ program of the European Union. He is the author or co-author of more than 80 scientific works (books, articles, papers and research projects), the majority of them directly related to Learning Technology, Accessibility, and Interoperability. His research interests are focused on learning objects and e-learning standardization, mainly in accessibility, metadata, distributed learning objects repositories, interoperability, and enterprise architectures.
José-María Gutiérrez-Martínez has Computer Science Degree (1996) and a Ph.D. in Computer Science (2006). As an associate professor at the University of Alcalá, he was head of the Computer Science Department for five years. He is also the Director of an University Master Program in Agile Web development. He has authored extensive works on mobile devices and their integration with traditional information systems. He has been working with e-learning and m-learning technologies following their evolution, applying many different approaches in his courses and presenting his research results in conferences and journals. He teaches degree courses on introduction to mobility and computer programming. Also, he has participated in research projects for e-health and led some of them involving the use of mobile devices to help with psychiatric treatments, medicine doses, wheelchair use, and tablet adaptations for highly dependent users. Some of these projects include the use of sensors and microcontrollers and their integration with mobile phone applications. He has worked in 4 European-funded projects and many local public funded research projects. He also encourages relations with companies, and has been the head of research that uses mobility and IA to help with industrial installation management.
Ana Castillo-Martínez has a BSc (2010) and MSc (2012) in Computer Science and PhD (2016) from the University of Alcalá. She is an assistant professor at the University of Alcalá, where she teaches courses related to computer programming. Her main research interests include the optimization of industrial environments through mobile devices and smart cities. She is a co-director of the research chair ENVAC Expert System for Smart Cities. She has participated in several European-founded projects, as well as publicly and locally founded research projects.