CFP: CHASE 2009

Call for Papers
Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering-Workshop at ICSE 08
– Sunday, May 17th, 2009

http://softwareresearch.ca/seg/CHASE2009/
_______________________________________________________

Theme
=====
Software is created by people – software engineers working in varied environments, under various conditions. Thus understanding the cooperative and human aspects of software development is crucial to understanding how methods and tools are used, and thereby improving both the creation and maintenance of software. Recently, a renaissance is occurring in this research area, with a large amount of research being published in software engineering venues as well as other research discourses. Thus the time is ripe to bring together researchers to share knowledge, and further build the research area.

The goal of this workshop is therefore to provide a forum for discussing high quality research on the cooperative and human aspects of software engineering, as well as a meeting place for the nascent community that is currently distributed over several research domains (e.g. HCI, SE, CSCW, and IS).

Topics of Interest
==================
include but are not limited to:

* Software engineering as cooperative work,
* Social and cultural aspects of software engineering,
* Psychological and cognitive aspects of software engineering,
* Managerial and organizational aspects of software engineering
* Coordination of large scale software development,
* Cooperation between software developers and other professionals over the lifetime of a system.
* Knowledge management in software engineering.

Submission
==========
Prospective participants are invited to submit position papers on a topic of relevance using the same format required for the ICSE technical papers (posted at http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/events/icse2009/calls/format/). Three types of submissions are invited. Eight-page Research papers go into detail about the research, 4-page Notes papers discuss preliminary findings, and 1-page Topic papers should cover very preliminary results or research ideas. Please see
http://softwareresearch.ca/seg/CHASE2009/
for additional submission instructions.

Important Dates
===============
* 21 January – deadline for workshop paper submission
* 12 February – notification of acceptance by workshop chairs
* 19 February – camera-ready deadline for workshop papers

Workshop Organisers and Program Committee
================================

* Li-Te Cheng, IBM, li-te_cheng at us.ibm.com
* Cleidson de Souza, UFPA, cdesouza at ufpa.br
* Yvonne Dittrich, IT University of Copenhagen, ydi at itu.dk
* Michael John, Fraunhofer, Michael.John at first.fraunhofer.de
* Orit Hazzan, Technion, oritha at techunix.technion.ac.il
* Frank Maurer, University of Calgary, frank.maurer at ucalgary.ca
* Helen Sharp, Open University, H.C.Sharp at open.ac.uk
* Janice Singer, NRC, janice.singer at nrc-cnrc.gc.ca
* Susan Elliot Sim, University of California Irvine, ses at ics.uci.edu
* Jonathan Sillito, University of Calgary, sillito at ucalgary.ca
* Margaret-Anne Storey, University of Victoria, mastorey at uvic.ca
* Bjornar Tessem, University of Bergen, Bjornar.Tessem at infomedia.uib.no
* Gina Venolia, Microsoft Research,Gina.Venolia at microsoft.com

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CFP: SofTEAM ’09

**************  Call for Papers *************************

European Workshop on “Collaboration and Knowledge Sharing in Software Development Teams (SofTEAM ’09)”

http://www1.in.tum.de/softeam09

In Conjunction with SE09, Kaiserslautern, Germany, March 2nd

Submissions deadline 20th December 2008

*********************************************************

*** MOTIVATION ***

ìThese are indeed interesting times. The challenges of software development are certainly not going to go away, for we as an industry are continually being driven to do more with less. Methods and processes help; so do languages, frameworks, and tools. However, software development is ultimately a human endeavor, and as such it’s ultimately the efforts of the software development team that enable us to deliver quality systems in a predictable and sustainable fashion.î (Booch, 1999)

Almost ten years after Booch emphasized the importance of development team productivity, the underlying research topics are only slowly becoming part of mainstream Software Engineering. Research on software development teams requires interdisciplinary approaches to study the interplay of technologies, tools, processes and human factors appropriately. Although the body of research is growing, it is often scattered across different communities such as Software Engineering, Computer-Supported Collaborative Work (CSCW) and Knowledge Management.
On the other hand, the trend towards distributed software development ñ which comes in different flavours such as off-shore- and near-shore development, Open Source communities and inter-organizational project teams ñ presses researchers to deliver results which help to improve the efficiency of development teams.
In the past, research and practice have often taken different directions ñ research targeting fancy prototypes, while practitioners adopted pragmatic solutions such as instant messaging, Wikis or agile methodologies to increase team productivity. While such hands-on solutions worked quite well for many teams, they lack scientific backing and guidance and have problems to scale up in large and complex project settings. Thus, solutions are sought which embed development methodologies, lightweight approaches for collaboration and knowledge sharing into software development work processes. An example for such an effort is the IBM Jazz platform [Cheng et al. 2004], which intends to seamlessly integrate common collaboration features into IDEs. Thereby, open development platforms such as Eclipse make it easier to transfer research into practice (e.g. the Eclipse mylyn project [Kersten and Murphy 2006]).

*** TOPICS OF INTEREST ***

In this workshop we would like to bring together researchers and practitioners working on different aspects of collaboration and knowledge sharing in software development to discuss new results and future research challenges. Major topics addressed at the workshop include (but are not limited to):
– Collaboration and knowledge sharing in development teams and communities.
– Lightweight and unobtrusive tools, Web 2.0 and Social Semantic Web applications, supporting development teams.
– Concerns of individual developers in collaboration settings, such as learning, personal productivity, usability and incentives.
– Approaches and tools for context-aware development and collaboration environments.
– Assistance and recommendation tools based on team experience.
– Research methods and approaches for analyzing and designing successful collaboration support.
– Empirical studies on collaboration and information behavior in development teams.
– Scientific analysis of the relation between methods/processes, tools and collaborative development practice.

*** PROGRAM COMMITTEE  ***

Andreas Abecker, FZI Karlsruhe
Lilith Al-Jadiri, T-Systems
Bernd Bruegge, TU Muenchen
Bjˆrn Decker, Empolis GmbH
Robert DeLine, Microsoft Research
Paul Gr¸nbacher, Johannes Kepler University
Hans-Joerg Happel, FZI Karlsruhe
Wolfgang Kaltz, Die Schweizerische Post
Steffen Lohmann, University of Duisburg-Essen
Walid Maalej, TU M¸nchen
Karsten Nebe, University of Paderborn
Jasminko Novak, University of Zurich
Barbara Paech, University of Heidelberg
Dirk Riehle, SAP Research
Hans Schlichter, TU M¸nchen
Janice Singer, National Research Council Canada
Anil Kumar Thurimella, Harman/Becker Automotive Systems GmbH
Denny Vrandecic, University of Karlsruhe (TH)
J¸rgen Ziegler, University of Duisburg-Essen
Thomas Zimmermann, University of Calgary

*** ORGANIZERS ***

Hans-Joerg Happel, FZI Karlsruhe
Steffen Lohmann, University of Duisburg-Essen
Walid Maalej, TU M¸nchen

*** CONTACT ***

softeam09-org@fzi.de
http://www1.in.tum.de/softeam09

*** DEADLINE ***

– 20th December: Paper submission
– 17th January: Author’s notification
– 31th January: Camera-ready version
– 2nd March: Workshop

*** SUBMISSION ***

Position, tool-demonstration and experience papers (max 10 pages) are equally welcome for the workshop. They can be submitted via the workshop website (http://www1.in.tum.de/softeam09). Accepted contributions will be published in the GI-Edition ÑLecture Notes in Informatics”. Papers must follow the instructions and templates provided at http://www.gi-ev.de/service/ publikationen/lni/. At least one author should participate in the workshop and register for the SE2009 conference.

Do end-users need software engineering skills?

I’ve been asked to write a Point, or maybe it’s a Counterpoint for a special issue of IEEE Software on End-user Software Engineering. I’ll be writing it jointly with my colleague, Mark Vigder.  Our point is that end-users need to have some software engineering skills.  Mark had a good analogy.  Thirty years or so ago, noone would have thought it was necessary for managers or executives to have typing skills, and now it’s almost unthinkable to not be able to do your own typing.  To me, software engineers have perfected, or at least advanced, many of the skills necessary to store and manipulate information in a digital context.

The skills that I think are most useful include debugging which more generally means problem solving in the sense of figuring out the cause for some effect and then being able to change things to get the desired effect.  I guess this actually translates more generally to testing practices in different contexts as well – such as making sure that you meet your requirements.  Another important skill is versioning.  I mean, isn’t it shocking that tools like Word still do not have effective versioning control.  But especially when you’re working in a team, you need to have a way to control documents.  Usually, we just use a “talk lock” meaning telling people not to work on it, and saving past drafts.  Probably in the future, not too distant, I hope, versioning will be embeded into all sorts of activities, and people will then need to have some cognitive model of how versioning works.  I think another important skill be based on creating useful widgets by combining components.  We can already see this in the proliferation of mash-ups.  I believe that the cognitive skill associated to this has to do with understanding things like information flow related to things like APIs.  Anyhow, you can see I’m just starting to think this through, so any thoughts or comments?  We’re thinking of calling the column something like, “Reading, Writing, Arithmetic…Software Engineering.”

CHASE 2009 is on

I just heard from the ICSE committee.  CHASE 2009 is on. This year’s organizers are me, Cleidson de Souza, Yvonne Dittrich and Helen Sharp. This year, we will be accepting 3 types of papers – 8 pages, 4 pages, and short 1 page research reports.  The idea is to span the spectrum of research activities, and let people at all stages of their research report their results.  We will also have a keynote from Daniel German of the University of Victoria. We’ll have our coffee table rounds which were such a success last year from the hard work of Yvonne and Helen, and finally, we’ll arrange a social evening for fun.  So, start thinking about your topics.  I’m not sure about days or deadlines yet, but will update as soon as we have a formal CFP.

What is modeling good for?

or really what is it not good for?  I was attending CASCON (a Canadian CS conference, largely sponsored by IBM, with some help from the NRC).  I went to one workshop on Modeling (*first one on the linked page*), MDD, MDE, or whatever you might like to call it.  There were some good talks.  One from a fellow at IBM describing the Rational Toolset, and some of the reasoning behind it.  One from a fellow at GM describing the challenges behind getting people to adopt modeling as a way of creating software.  There were also several talks from Canadian academics outlining a research strategy for understanding and improving MDD, from the very technological side, to processes and practices.

So, after all the talks, especially as we were trying to define the research area, one fellow said – often when we are trying to understand what something is good for, it helps to know what it isn’t good for, under what circumstances, would we not want to use models to create software?  There wasn’t really a good answer to that comment.  I’ve thought about this some, probably not deeply enough, but I think it has to do with overhead.  Modeling is probably always a good idea, but eventually, maybe sooner rather than later, you’re going to incur some significant overhead, over other methods of software development, such that modeling just doesn’t make sense anymore.  I guess what this says, is that in order to make modeling successful, we really need good infrastructure tools to support development, collaboration and practices – so that the benefits associated with MDD are not outweighed by the costs of using it.  Of course, this is always assuming that your code generator works well, and creates code that runs well.  To mind this is a problem that will soon be overcome – I mean people used to write software with cards and machine language – they don’t do that anymore.

Other than that, there are probably some areas where the overhead associated with modeling will just never make sense – like in some scientific coding, where the software is only used once or twice.  What other situations can you think of?

And something I’ve been wondering lately – how did assembly language programmers feel about structured programming languages when they appeared on the scene?  Did they switch easily, or were there significant issues of trust involved before the switch-over occured?

Science of software, well really software for scientists

If you have ever read my projects page (and shame on you if you haven’t :)), you’ll know that I also conduct research on software for scientists, looking at how scientists create, evolve, manage, and archive software and data.  We’re just about to deploy a large survey looking at the current work practices of scientists.  We need a few good pilots, pilot subjects that is.  If you’re interested, the survey takes about 30 minutes – although you can just read through and provide comments.  Also, if you have any scientist friends who would be willing to serve, that would be great.

The website is:  http://softwareresearch.ca/seg/SCS/scientific-computing-survey.html

THANKS!

CFP: Supporting distributed team work

CALL FOR PAPERS

————————————————————————
Supporting Distributed Team Work

Workshop in conjunction with CSCW 2008
Sunday, November 9, 2008
San Diego, CA, USA
Submission deadline: September 24
URL: http://conway.isri.cmu.edu/~jdh/VRC-2008
CSCW URL: http://www.cscw2008.org/index.html
————————————————————————

Geographically distributed teams and virtual organizations are
commonplace today. But we know that coordination in such settings is
problematic, especially for tasks that involve closely-coupled work.
Despite extensive research in coordination in distributed teams, the
common wisdom is still that highly interdependent tasks often require
collocation. However, collocation may be impractical in many business
and engineering settings, and in open production systems such as
open-source software and Wikipedia.

Evidence suggests that radical collocation, i.e. an open-plan team room,
can further aid collaboration. We lack a detailed understanding of
fine-grained task dependencies that occur in closely coupled work and
the mechanisms by which radical collocation can moderate those effects.
Consequently, there exist few alternatives to collocation — or using
technology to recreate a semblance of collocation — to avoid
coordination breakdowns when tasks are tightly linked.

This workshop seeks to understand the barriers and solutions for
closely-coupled work by fully- and partially-distributed teams and to
chart solutions motivated by studies of collocation and radical collocation.

ORGANIZERS
———-
Thomas Finholt – University of Michigan
James Herbsleb – Carnegie Mellon University
Gary Olson – University of California, Irvine
Judy Olson – University of California, Irvine
Anita Sarma – Carnegie Mellon University
Bhargav Sriprakash – University of Michigan
Gina Venolia – Microsoft Research
Patrick Wagstrom – Carnegie Mellon University

WORKSHOP GOALS
————–
** You are getting this email through the CHASE mailing list maintained by
Janice Singer – if you no longer wish to receive CHASE announcements please
email janice.singer@nrc.ca.  If you know someone else who would like these
announcements, please have them email Janice**

————————————————————————
Supporting Distributed Team Work

Workshop in conjunction with CSCW 2008
Sunday, November 9, 2008
San Diego, CA, USA
Submission deadline: September 24
URL: http://conway.isri.cmu.edu/~jdh/VRC-2008
CSCW URL: http://www.cscw2008.org/index.html
————————————————————————

Geographically distributed teams and virtual organizations are
commonplace today. But we know that coordination in such settings is
problematic, especially for tasks that involve closely-coupled work.
Despite extensive research in coordination in distributed teams, the
common wisdom is still that highly interdependent tasks often require
collocation. However, collocation may be impractical in many business
and engineering settings, and in open production systems such as
open-source software and Wikipedia.

Evidence suggests that radical collocation, i.e. an open-plan team room,
can further aid collaboration. We lack a detailed understanding of
fine-grained task dependencies that occur in closely coupled work and
the mechanisms by which radical collocation can moderate those effects.
Consequently, there exist few alternatives to collocation — or using
technology to recreate a semblance of collocation — to avoid
coordination breakdowns when tasks are tightly linked.

This workshop seeks to understand the barriers and solutions for
closely-coupled work by fully- and partially-distributed teams and to
chart solutions motivated by studies of collocation and radical collocation.

ORGANIZERS
———-
Thomas Finholt – University of Michigan
James Herbsleb – Carnegie Mellon University
Gary Olson – University of California, Irvine
Judy Olson – University of California, Irvine
Anita Sarma – Carnegie Mellon University
Bhargav Sriprakash – University of Michigan
Gina Venolia – Microsoft Research
Patrick Wagstrom – Carnegie Mellon University

WORKSHOP GOALS
————–
The overall goals of the workshop are to create a vision of distributed
work will be accomplished in the future, to understand the barriers that
currently stand in the way of realizing this vision, and to foster a
community of researchers who are working toward making this vision a
reality.

WORKSHOP THEMES
—————
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to

* Empirical studies of fine-grained coordination
* Empirical studies of the effect of team distribution on knowledge work
* Study of coordination across different phases of the development life
cycle
* Ways to measure the cascading effects of decisions taken at one phase
on others
* Methods and metrics to measure task coupling
* Tools to support closely-coupled tasks
* Tools to track dependencies in non code artifacts
* Coordination mechanisms for closely-coupled work
* Models of virtual radical collocation
* Models of closely-coupled work
* Mechanisms for coordinating closely-coupled work over long distances
* Team and workspace awareness
* Tools for distributed work inspired by behaviors in collocated and
radically collocated teams
* Re-evaluate the common wisdom regarding the difficulties of radical
virtual collocation
* Share research on close task coupling in particular domains
* Inform and foster research on coordination within virtual organizations
* Provide a link between research on coordination and communication
issues and developers of tools for virtual organizations
* Evaluate and discuss new and upcoming theories regarding virtual
organizations

SUBMISSIONS
———–
Both research papers (10 page max) and position papers (4 page max) will
be accepted.  Submissions will be reviewed by the organizers who will
solicit outside reviews as appropriate.  To facilitate discussion, all
those attending must submit a paper.

Presenters have the option of having their entire paper or just the
abstract published — the latter option is available for authors who
wish to avoid issues with submission to future publication.  Each
published position paper will retain the author’s copyright.

MORE INFORMATION
—————-
More information can be found on the workshop website:
http://conway.isri.cmu.edu/~jdh/VRC-2008

Send me your website addy

I was fooling around with my blog yesterday and looking at the stats.  I get about 15 hits a week or so, with about 125 hits on the related researchers page since the blog was started in Nov. 08.

But the problem is, I have no links on the page.  Obviously, there’s some interest with so many hits. Over time, I will definitely build up this aspect, but it would sure help me if you could send me your link if you’re interested in being on the page and a short one-liner to describe your research.

Extension: SI of JCSCW on Software Development as Cooperative Work

Many people have asked for an extension to submit to the special issue of JCSCW on Software Development as Cooperative Work, so our new (and very HARD) deadline is September 22, 2008.  If you are planning to submit and have not yet sent an abstract, please do so ASAP.  It will help us to assign reviewers.

CHASE 2009 (Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering)

Well, we (Yvonne Dittrich, Cleidson de Souza, Helen Sharp and myself) are just putting together our proposal for CHASE 2009 for ICSE in Vancouver. Before we finalize our proposal, in the service of cooperation : ), I thought I’d ask all of you out there what you liked and didn’t about last year’s CHASE. Is there something we should do differently this year? Are there other topics we should include in our CFP? Just in case you forgot to bookmark it, here is the website for CHASE 2008.

We have decided to include 1 page, 4 page, and 8 page papers to give people at different points in the research cycle an opportunity to participate. What do you think of this? We also plan to follow the same basic format as last year with directed coffee table rounds focusing on posters and paper presentations. One thing we are considering is a keynote address. Any ideas for who we should invite?

The proposal is due on September 15th, so send comments now, either below or by emailing me.