DocumentCode
555345
Title
The hidden experts in software-engineering communication: NIER track
Author
Kwan, Irwin ; Damian, Daniela
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
fYear
2011
fDate
21-28 May 2011
Firstpage
800
Lastpage
803
Abstract
Sharing knowledge in a timely fashion is important in distributed software development. However, because experts are difficult to locate, developers tend to broadcast information to find the right people, which leads to overload and to communication breakdowns. We study the context in which experts are included in an email discussion so that team members can identify experts sooner. In this paper, we conduct a case study examining why people emerge in discussions by examining email within a distributed team. We find that people emerge in the following four situations: when a crisis occurs, when they respond to explicit requests, when they are forwarded in announcements, and when discussants follow up on a previous event such as a meeting. We observe that emergent people respond not only to situations where developers are seeking expertise, but also to execute routine tasks. Our findings have implications for expertise seeking and knowledge management processes.
Keywords
distributed programming; knowledge management; software engineering; NIER track; distributed software development; distributed team; email; knowledge management; knowledge sharing; software-engineering communication; Context; Electronic mail; Organizations; Programming; Servers; collaborative software engineering; expertise seeking; human factors in software engineering;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Engineering (ICSE), 2011 33rd International Conference on
Conference_Location
Honolulu, HI
ISSN
0270-5257
Print_ISBN
978-1-4503-0445-0
Electronic_ISBN
0270-5257
Type
conf
DOI
10.1145/1985793.1985906
Filename
6032522
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