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Systematic review in software engineering: where we are and where we should be going

Published: 22 September 2012 Publication History

Abstract

In 2004 Kitchenham et al. first proposed the idea of evidence-based software engineering (EBSE). EBSE requires a systematic and unbiased method of aggregating empirical studies and has encouraged software engineering researches to undertake systematic literature reviews (SLRs) of Software Engineering topics and research questions. As software engineers began to use the SLR technology, they also began to comment on the SLR process itself. Brereton et al (2007) was one of the first papers that commented on issues connected with performing SLRs and many such papers have followed since covering topics such as: The use of SLRs in education; Experiences of novices using SLRs; The adoption of mapping and scoping studies; The repeatability of SLRs; Improving the search and selection processes; Quality assessment of primary studies; Improving aggregation processes.
It therefore seems appropriate to identify the current status of such studies in software engineering, and identify whether there is evidence for revising and/or extending the guidelines for performing systematic literature reviews (Kitchenham and Charters, 2007). This keynote will report the current results of an ongoing systematic literature review that aims: A1: To identify and categorise papers investigating the SLR process and the claims relating to that process; A2: To identify the extent to which the claims of repeatability, lack of bias, and openness are supported; A3: To identify any areas where current guidelines need to be amended or extended to reflect current knowledge of applying SLRs in the context of software engineering.

References

[1]
Brereton, O.P., Kitchenham, B.A., Budgen, D., Turner, M. and Khalil, M. (2007) Lessons from applying the systematic literature review process within the software engineering domain, Journal of Systems and Software, 80 (4), pp. 571--583.
[2]
Kitchenham, B., Tore Dybå and Magne Jørgensen. (2004) Evidence-based Software Engineering. Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Software Engineering, (ICSE '04)
[3]
Kitchenham, B.A. and S. Charters (2007) Guidelines for performing systematic literature reviews in software engineering, Technical Report EBSE-2007-01, School of Computer Science and Mathematics, Keele University.

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    EAST '12: Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Evidential assessment of software technologies
    September 2012
    72 pages
    ISBN:9781450315098
    DOI:10.1145/2372233

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 22 September 2012

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    1. research methods
    2. systematic literature review process

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