Title :
Analysis of the impact of reading technique and inspector capability on individual inspection performance
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Software Technol., Tech. Univ. Wien, Austria
Abstract :
Inspection of software documents is an effective quality assurance measure to detect defects in the early stages of software development. It can provide timely feedback on product quality to both developers and managers. This paper reports on a controlled experiment that investigated the influence of reading techniques and inspector capability on individual effectiveness to find given sets of defects in a requirements specification document. Experimental results support the hypothesis that reading techniques can direct inspectors´ attention towards inspection targets, i.e. on specific document parts or severity levels, which enables inspection planners to divide the inspection work among several inspectors. Further, they suggest a tradeoff between specific and general detection effectiveness regarding document coverage and inspection effort. Inspector capability plays a significant role in inspection performance, while the size of the effect varies with the reading technique employed and the inspected document part
Keywords :
human factors; performance index; software quality; system documentation; detection effectiveness; document coverage; empirical software engineering; individual inspection performance; inspection effort; inspection performance; inspection planners; inspection targets; inspector capability; inspectors´ attention; quality assurance measure; reading technique; requirements specification document; severity levels; software defect detection; software development; software document inspection; software product quality feedback; Data analysis; Fault diagnosis; Feedback; Inspection; Programming; Quality management; Software engineering; Software measurement; Software performance;
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering Conference, 2000. APSEC 2000. Proceedings. Seventh Asia-Pacific
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0915-0
DOI :
10.1109/APSEC.2000.896692