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5. ISESE 2006: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Guilherme Horta Travassos, José Carlos Maldonado, Claes Wohlin:
2006 International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering (ISESE 2006), September 21-22, 2006, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. ACM 2006, ISBN 1-59593-218-6
Keynote address
- Victor R. Basili:
Is there a future for empirical software engineering? 1
Faults and failures
- Piotr Tomaszewski, Lars-Ola Damm:
Comparing the fault-proneness of new and modified code: an industrial case study. 2-7 - Erik Arisholm, Lionel C. Briand:
Predicting fault-prone components in a java legacy system. 8-17 - Adrian Schröter, Thomas Zimmermann, Andreas Zeller:
Predicting component failures at design time. 18-27
Research methodology
- Sira Vegas, Natalia Juristo Juzgado, Ana María Moreno, Martín Solari, Patricio Letelier:
Analysis of the influence of communication between researchers on experiment replication. 28-37 - Barbara A. Kitchenham, Hiyam Al-Kilidar, Muhammad Ali Babar, Mike Berry, Karl Cox, Jacky Keung, Felicia Kurniawati, Mark Staples, He Zhang, Liming Zhu:
Evaluating guidelines for empirical software engineering studies. 38-47 - Manoel G. Mendonça, Daniela S. Cruzes, Josemeire Dias, Maria Cristina Ferreira de Oliveira:
Using observational pilot studies to test and improve lab packages. 48-57
Cost and effort estimation
- Stein Grimstad, Magne Jørgensen:
A framework for the analysis of software cost estimation accuracy. 58-65 - Jingzhou Li, Günther Ruhe:
A comparative study of attribute weighting heuristics for effort estimation by analogy. 66-74 - Chris Lokan, Emilia Mendes:
Cross-company and single-company effort models using the ISBSG database: a further replicated study. 75-84
Comparing defect detection techniques
- Monvorath Phongpaibul, Barry W. Boehm:
An empirical comparison between pair development and software inspection in Thailand. 85-94 - Lulu He, Jeffrey C. Carver:
PBR vs. checklist: a replication in the n-fold inspection context. 95-104 - Johannes Mayer, Christoph Schneckenburger:
An empirical analysis and comparison of random testing techniques. 105-114
Software design
- Fredrik Törner, Martin Ivarsson, Fredrik Pettersson, Peter Öhman:
Defects in automotive use cases. 115-123 - Bente Anda, Kai Hansen:
A case study on the application of UML in legacy development. 124-133 - Davide Falessi, Giovanni Cantone, Martin Becker:
Documenting design decision rationale to improve individual and team design decision making: an experimental evaluation. 134-143
Software projects
- Richard Berntsson-Svensson, Aybüke Aurum:
Successful software project and products: An empirical investigation. 144-153 - June M. Verner, Karl Cox, Steven J. Bleistein:
Predicting good requirements for in-house development projects. 154-163 - Geir Kjetil Hanssen, Tor Erlend Fægri:
Agile customer engagement: a longitudinal qualitative case study. 164-173
Defect detection
- Margaret A. Wojcicki, Paul A. Strooper:
Maximising the information gained from an experimental analysis of code inspection and static analysis for concurrent java components. 174-183 - Christian Denger, Ronny Kolb:
Testing and inspecting reusable product line components: first empirical results. 184-193 - Stefan Wagner:
A literature survey of the quality economics of defect-detection techniques. 194-203
Software operation and evolution
- Clemente Izurieta, James M. Bieman:
The evolution of FreeBSD and Linux. 204-211 - Gengshen Du, Jim McElroy, Günther Ruhe:
A family of empirical studies to compare informal and optimization-based planning of software releases. 212-221 - Audris Mockus:
Empirical estimates of software availability of deployed systems. 222-231
Software development and developers
- John Karn, Tony Cowling:
A follow up study of the effect of personality on the performance of software engineering teams. 232-241 - Odd Petter N. Slyngstad, Anita Gupta, Reidar Conradi, Parastoo Mohagheghi, Harald Rønneberg, Einar Landre:
An empirical study of developers views on software reuse in statoil ASA. 242-251 - Muhammad Ali Babar, Barbara A. Kitchenham, D. Ross Jeffery:
Distributed versus face-to-face meetings for architecture evalution: a controlled experiment. 252-261
Software testing
- Ossi Taipale, Kari Smolander:
Improving software testing by observing practice. 262-271 - Jing Guan, Jeff Offutt, Paul Ammann:
An industrial case study of structural testing applied to safety-critical embedded software. 272-277 - Jeffrey C. Carver, Marc Fisher II, Gregg Rothermel:
An empirical evaluation of a testing and debugging methodology for Excel. 278-287
Architecture and refactoring
- Steve Counsell, Youssef Hassoun, George Loizou, Rajaa Najjar:
Common refactorings, a dependency graph and some code smells: an empirical study of Java OSS. 288-296 - Mika Mäntylä, Casper Lassenius:
Drivers for software refactoring decisions. 297-306 - Muhammad Ali Babar, Stefan Biffl:
Eliciting better quality architecture evaluation scenarios: a controlled experiment on top-down vs. bottom-up. 307-315
Metrics and measurement
- Patrik Berander, Per Jönsson:
A goal question metric based approach for efficient measurement framework definition. 316-325 - Lena Karlsson, Martin Höst, Björn Regnell:
Evaluating the practical use of different measurement scales in requirements prioritisation. 326-335
Defect classification
- Gursimran Singh Walia, Jeffrey C. Carver, Thomas Philip:
Requirement error abstraction and classification: an empirical study. 336-345 - Taiga Nakamura, Lorin Hochstein, Victor R. Basili:
Identifying domain-specific defect classes using inspections and change history. 346-355
Test-driven development
- Thirumalesh Bhat, Nachiappan Nagappan:
Evaluating the efficacy of test-driven development: industrial case studies. 356-363 - Gerardo Canfora, Aniello Cimitile, Félix García, Mario Piattini, Corrado Aaron Visaggio:
Evaluating advantages of test driven development: a controlled experiment with professionals. 364-371
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