DocumentCode
635229
Title
User involvement in software evolution practice: A case study
Author
Pagano, Dennis ; Bruegge, Bernd
Author_Institution
Tech. Univ. Munchen, Munich, Germany
fYear
2013
fDate
18-26 May 2013
Firstpage
953
Lastpage
962
Abstract
User involvement in software engineering has been researched over the last three decades. However, existing studies concentrate mainly on early phases of user-centered design projects, while little is known about how professionals work with post-deployment end-user feedback. In this paper we report on an empirical case study that explores the current practice of user involvement during software evolution. We found that user feedback contains important information for developers, helps to improve software quality and to identify missing features. In order to assess its relevance and potential impact, developers need to analyze the gathered feedback, which is mostly accomplished manually and consequently requires high effort. Overall, our results show the need for tool support to consolidate, structure, analyze, and track user feedback, particularly when feedback volume is high. Our findings call for a hypothesis-driven analysis of user feedback to establish the foundations for future user feedback tools.
Keywords
software maintenance; software quality; user centred design; user interfaces; hypothesis-driven analysis; missing feature identification; post-deployment end-user feedback; software engineering; software evolution practice; software quality improvement; user involvement; user-centered design projects; Companies; Data collection; Electronic mail; Interviews; Mobile communication; Software quality; software evolution; user feedback; user involvement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Engineering (ICSE), 2013 35th International Conference on
Conference_Location
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-3073-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSE.2013.6606645
Filename
6606645
Link To Document