Status of Empirical Research in Software Engineering

  • Name:

    Konferenzartikel 

  • Author:

    Andreas Höfer, Walter F. Tichy 

  • Zusammenfassung

    We provide an assessment of the status of empirical software research by analyzing all refereed articles that appeared in the Journal of Empirical Software Engineering from its first issue in January 1996 through June 2006. The journal publishes empirical software research exclusively and it is the only journal to do so. The main findings are: 1. The dominant empirical methods are experiments and case studies. Other methods (correlational studies, meta analysis, surveys, descriptive approaches, ex post facto studies) occur infrequently long-term studies are missing. About a quarter of the experiments are replications. 2. Professionals are used somewhat more frequently than students as subjects. 3. The dominant topics studied are measurement/metrics and tools/methods/frameworks. Metrics research is dominated by correlational and case studies without any experiments. 4. Important topics are underrepresented or absent, for example: programming languages, model driven development, formal methods, and others. The narrow focus on a few empirically researched topics is in contrast to the broad scope of software research.

  • Year:

    2007 

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Bibtex

@inproceedings{,
author={Andreas H{\"o}fer, Walter F. Tichy},
title={Status of Empirical Research in Software Engineering},
year=2007,
booktitle={Empirical Software Engineering Issues},
publisher={Springer},
volume={4336/2007},
url={https://ps.ipd.kit.edu/downloads/ka_2007_status_empirical_research_software_engineering.pdf},
abstract={We provide an assessment of the status of empirical softwareresearch by analyzing all refereed articles that appeared in the Journal ofEmpirical Software Engineering from its first issue in January 1996 throughJune 2006. The journal publishes empirical software research exclusively and itis the only journal to do so. It is thus a good source for surveying this type of work. The main findings are: 1. The dominant empirical methods areexperiments and case studies. Other methods (correlational studies, metaanalysis, surveys, descriptive approaches, ex post facto studies) occurinfrequently long-term studies are missing. About a quarter of the experimentsare replications. 2. Professionals are used somewhat more frequently thanstudents as subjects. 3. The dominant topics studied are measurement/metricsand tools/methods/frameworks. Important topics are underrepresented orabsent, for example: programming languages, model driven development,formal methods, and others. The narrow focus on a few empirically researchedtopics is in contrast to the broad scope of software research.},
pages={10-19},
journal={LNCS},