Title
Scents in Programs: Does Information Foraging Theory Apply to Program Maintenance?
Abstract
During maintenance, professional developers generate and test many hypotheses about program behavior, but they also spend much of their time navigating among classes and methods. Little is known, however, about how professional developers navigate source code and the extent to which their hypotheses relate to their navigation. A lack of understanding of these issues is a barrier to tools aiming to reduce the large fraction of time developers spend navigating source code. In this paper, we report on a study that makes use of information foraging theory to investigate how professional developers navigate source code during maintenance. Our results showed that information foraging theory was a significant predictor of the developers' maintenance behavior, and suggest how tools used during maintenance can build upon this result, simply by adding word analysis to their reasoning systems.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1109/VLHCC.2007.48
VL/HCC
Keywords
Field
DocType
significant predictor,program maintenance,time developer,program behavior,maintenance behavior,professional developer,large fraction,source code,reasoning system,information foraging theory apply,word analysis,professional development,software maintenance
Information foraging theory,Software engineering,Brute-force search,Computer science,Cognitive systems,Program behavior,Source code,Human–computer interaction,Program maintenance,Software maintenance
Conference
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
1943-6092
0-7695-2987-9
17
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.88
16
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Joseph Lawrance143118.76
Rachel Bellamy216222.64
Margaret M. Burnett33607262.34