Applying bayesian data analysis for causal inference about requirements quality: a controlled experiment

Uloženo v:
Podrobná bibliografie
Název: Applying bayesian data analysis for causal inference about requirements quality: a controlled experiment
Autoři: Frattini, Julian, 1995, Fucci, Davide, Torkar, Richard, 1971, Montgomery, Lloyd, Unterkalmsteiner, Michael, Fischbach, Jannik, Mendez, Daniel
Zdroj: Empirical Software Engineering. 30(1)
Témata: Replication, Requirements quality, Experiment, Requirements engineering, Bayesian data analysis
Popis: It is commonly accepted that the quality of requirements specifications impacts subsequent software engineering activities. However, we still lack empirical evidence to support organizations in deciding whether their requirements are good enough or impede subsequent activities. We aim to contribute empirical evidence to the effect that requirements quality defects have on a software engineering activity that depends on this requirement. We conduct a controlled experiment in which 25 participants from industry and university generate domain models from four natural language requirements containing different quality defects. We evaluate the resulting models using both frequentist and Bayesian data analysis. Contrary to our expectations, our results show that the use of passive voice only has a minor impact on the resulting domain models. The use of ambiguous pronouns, however, shows a strong effect on various properties of the resulting domain models. Most notably, ambiguous pronouns lead to incorrect associations in domain models. Despite being equally advised against by literature and frequentist methods, the Bayesian data analysis shows that the two investigated quality defects have vastly different impacts on software engineering activities and, hence, deserve different levels of attention. Our employed method can be further utilized by researchers to improve reliable, detailed empirical evidence on requirements quality.
Popis souboru: electronic
Přístupová URL adresa: https://research.chalmers.se/publication/544022
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/544018
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/544022/file/544022_Fulltext.pdf
Databáze: SwePub
Popis
Abstrakt:It is commonly accepted that the quality of requirements specifications impacts subsequent software engineering activities. However, we still lack empirical evidence to support organizations in deciding whether their requirements are good enough or impede subsequent activities. We aim to contribute empirical evidence to the effect that requirements quality defects have on a software engineering activity that depends on this requirement. We conduct a controlled experiment in which 25 participants from industry and university generate domain models from four natural language requirements containing different quality defects. We evaluate the resulting models using both frequentist and Bayesian data analysis. Contrary to our expectations, our results show that the use of passive voice only has a minor impact on the resulting domain models. The use of ambiguous pronouns, however, shows a strong effect on various properties of the resulting domain models. Most notably, ambiguous pronouns lead to incorrect associations in domain models. Despite being equally advised against by literature and frequentist methods, the Bayesian data analysis shows that the two investigated quality defects have vastly different impacts on software engineering activities and, hence, deserve different levels of attention. Our employed method can be further utilized by researchers to improve reliable, detailed empirical evidence on requirements quality.
ISSN:15737616
13823256
DOI:10.1007/s10664-024-10582-1