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An investigation of software development process terminology

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conference contribution
posted on 2017-01-11, 14:45 authored by Paul Clarke, Antoni Lluís Mesquida Calafat, Damjan Ekert, J.J. Ekstrom, Tatjana Gornostaja, Milos Jovanovic, Jørn Johansen, Antonia Mas, Richard Messnarz, Blanca Nájera Villar, Alexander O'Connor, Rory V. O'Connor, Michael Reiner, Gabriele Sauberer, Klaus-Dirk Schmitz, Murat Yilmaz
The practice of software development has evolved considerably in recent decades, with new programming technologies, the affordability of hardware, pervasive internet access and mobile computing all contributing to the emergence of new software development processes. The newer process initiatives, which include those which are sometimes referred to as agile or lean methods, have brought with them new terms, which sometimes reflect the introduction of novel concepts. Other times, new terms correspond to long established concepts that have been repackaged. The net position is that we have a proliferation of language and term usage in the software development process domain, a problem which has implications for assessors and assessment frameworks, and for the broader community. In this paper, we explore this problem, finding that it is worthy of further research. Plus, we identify a technique suited to addressing this concern: the establishment of a canonical software process ontological model.

History

Publication

16th International Conference, SPICE 2016: Communications in Computer and Information Science;609, pp. 351-361

Publisher

Springer

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

SFI

Rights

The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com

Language

English

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