Relating Reading, Visualization, and Coding for New Programmers: A Neuroimaging StudyTechnical Track
Wed 26 May 2021 08:15 - 08:35 at Blended Sessions Room 2 - 1.5.2. Developers: Observational Studies
Understanding how novices reason about coding at a neurological level has implications for training the next generation of software engineers. In recent years, medical imaging has been increasingly employed to investigate patterns of neural activity associated with coding activity. However, such studies have focused on advanced undergraduates and professionals. In a human study of 31 participants, we use functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure the neural activity associated with introductory programming. In a controlled, contrast-based experiment, we relate brain activity when coding to that of reading natural language or mentally rotating objects (a spatial visualization task). Our primary result is that all three tasks—coding, prose reading, and mental rotation—are mentally distinct for novices. However, while those tasks are neurally distinct, we find more significant differences between prose and coding than between mental rotation and coding. Intriguingly, we generally find more activation in areas of the brain associated with spatial ability and task difficulty for novice coding compared to that reported in studies with more expert developers. Finally, in an exploratory analysis, we also find a neural activation pattern predictive of performance weeks later. While preliminary, these findings both expand on previous results (e.g., relating expertise to a similarity between coding and prose reading) and also provide a new understanding of the cognitive processes underlying novice programming.
Tue 25 MayDisplayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change
19:35 - 20:55 | 1.5.2. Developers: Observational StudiesSEIP - Software Engineering in Practice / Journal-First Papers / Technical Track at Blended Sessions Room 2 +12h Chair(s): Carolyn Seaman University of Maryland Baltimore County | ||
19:35 20mPaper | What Leads to a Confirmatory or Disconfirmatory Behaviour of Software Testers?Journal-First Journal-First Papers Iflaah Salman University of Oulu, Pilar Rodriguez Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Burak Turhan Monash University, Ayse Tosun Istanbul Technical University, Arda Gureller Ericsson Pre-print Media Attached | ||
19:55 20mPaper | An interview study of how developers use execution logs in embedded software engineeringSEIP SEIP - Software Engineering in Practice Nan Yang Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands, Pieter Cuijpers Eindhoven University of Technology, Ramon Schiffelers Eindhoven University of Technology and ASML, the Netherlands, Johan Lukkien Eindhoven University of Technology, Alexander Serebrenik Eindhoven University of Technology Pre-print Media Attached | ||
20:15 20mPaper | Relating Reading, Visualization, and Coding for New Programmers: A Neuroimaging StudyTechnical Track Technical Track Madeline Endres University of Michigan, Zachary Karas University of Michigan, Xiaosu Hu University of Michigan, Ioulia Kovelman University of Michigan, Westley Weimer University of Michigan Pre-print Media Attached | ||
20:35 20mPaper | Explicit Programming StrategiesJournal-First Journal-First Papers Thomas LaToza George Mason University, Maryam Arab George Mason University, Dastyni Loksa Towson University, Amy Ko University of Washington Link to publication Pre-print Media Attached |
Wed 26 MayDisplayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change
07:35 - 08:55 | 1.5.2. Developers: Observational StudiesSEIP - Software Engineering in Practice / Technical Track / Journal-First Papers at Blended Sessions Room 2 | ||
07:35 20mPaper | What Leads to a Confirmatory or Disconfirmatory Behaviour of Software Testers?Journal-First Journal-First Papers Iflaah Salman University of Oulu, Pilar Rodriguez Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Burak Turhan Monash University, Ayse Tosun Istanbul Technical University, Arda Gureller Ericsson Pre-print Media Attached | ||
07:55 20mPaper | An interview study of how developers use execution logs in embedded software engineeringSEIP SEIP - Software Engineering in Practice Nan Yang Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands, Pieter Cuijpers Eindhoven University of Technology, Ramon Schiffelers Eindhoven University of Technology and ASML, the Netherlands, Johan Lukkien Eindhoven University of Technology, Alexander Serebrenik Eindhoven University of Technology Pre-print Media Attached | ||
08:15 20mPaper | Relating Reading, Visualization, and Coding for New Programmers: A Neuroimaging StudyTechnical Track Technical Track Madeline Endres University of Michigan, Zachary Karas University of Michigan, Xiaosu Hu University of Michigan, Ioulia Kovelman University of Michigan, Westley Weimer University of Michigan Pre-print Media Attached | ||
08:35 20mPaper | Explicit Programming StrategiesJournal-First Journal-First Papers Thomas LaToza George Mason University, Maryam Arab George Mason University, Dastyni Loksa Towson University, Amy Ko University of Washington Link to publication Pre-print Media Attached |