• DocumentCode
    3072452
  • Title

    What Can Developers´ Messages Tell Us? A Psycholinguistic Analysis of Jazz Teams´ Attitudes and Behavior Patterns

  • Author

    Licorish, Sherlock A. ; Macdonell, Stephen G.

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Comput. & Math. Sci., Auckland Univ. of Technol., Auckland, New Zealand
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    4-7 June 2013
  • Firstpage
    107
  • Lastpage
    116
  • Abstract
    Reports that communication and behavioral issues contribute to inadequately performing software teams have fuelled a wealth of research aimed at understanding the human processes employed during software development. The increasing level of interest in human issues is particularly relevant for agile and global software development approaches that emphasize the importance of people and their interactions during projects. While mature analysis techniques in behavioral psychology have been recommended for studying such issues, particularly when using archives and artifacts, these techniques have rarely been used in software engineering research. We utilize these techniques under an embedded case study approach to examine whether IBM Rational Jazz practitioners´ behaviors change over project duration and whether certain tasks affect teams´ attitudes and behaviors. We found highest levels of project engagement at project start and completion, as well as increasing levels of team collectiveness as projects progressed. Additionally, Jazz practitioners were most insightful and perceptive at the time of project scoping. Further, Jazz teams´ attitudes and behaviors varied in line with the nature of the tasks they were performing. We explain these findings and discuss their implications for software project governance and tool design.
  • Keywords
    project management; psychology; software development management; team working; IBM Rational Jazz; behavioral psychology; global software development approach; mature analysis technique; project duration; project engagement; psycholinguistic analysis; software project governance; software team attitude; software team behavior pattern; software tool design; Context; Data mining; Documentation; Encoding; Pragmatics; Project management; Software; Jazz; attitudes and behaviors; psycholinguistics; software development; software tasks; team evolution;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC), 2013 22nd Australian
  • Conference_Location
    Melbourne, VIC
  • ISSN
    1530-0803
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ASWEC.2013.22
  • Filename
    6601298