Write a Blog >>
ICSE 2021
Mon 17 May - Sat 5 June 2021
Wed 26 May 2021 18:50 - 19:10 at Blended Sessions Room 2 - 2.5.2. Developers: Experiments Chair(s): Sira Vegas
Thu 27 May 2021 06:50 - 07:10 at Blended Sessions Room 2 - 2.5.2. Developers: Experiments

Static code analysis tools and integrated development environments present developers with quality-related software metrics, some of which are on how understandable their source code is. Software metrics influence overarching strategic decisions that impact the future of companies and the prioritization of everyday software development tasks. Several software metrics, however, lack in validation: we just choose to trust that they reflect what they are supposed to measure. Some of them were even shown to not measure the quality aspects they intend to measure. Yet, they influence us through biases in our cognitive-driven actions. In particular, they might anchor us in our decisions. Whether the anchoring effect exists with software metrics has not been studied yet.

We conduct a randomized and double-blind experiment to investigate the extent to which a displayed metric value for source code comprehensibility anchors developers in their subjective rating of source code comprehensibility, whether performance is affected by the anchoring effect when working on comprehension tasks, and which individual characteristics might play a role in the anchoring effect. We found that the displayed value of a comprehensibility metric has a significant and large anchoring effect on a developer’s code comprehensibility rating. The effect does not seem to affect the time or correctness when working on comprehension questions related to the code snippet under study. Since the anchoring effect is one of the most robust cognitive biases, and we have limited understanding of the consequences of the demonstrated manipulation of developers by non-validated metrics, we call for an increased awareness of the responsibility in code quality reporting and for corresponding tools to be based on scientific evidence.

Wed 26 May

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

18:50 - 19:50
2.5.2. Developers: ExperimentsJournal-First Papers / Technical Track at Blended Sessions Room 2 +12h
Chair(s): Sira Vegas Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
18:50
20m
Paper
The Mind Is a Powerful Place: How Showing Code Comprehensibility Metrics Influences Code UnderstandingTechnical Track
Technical Track
Marvin Wyrich University of Stuttgart, Andreas Preikschat University of Stuttgart, Daniel Graziotin University of Stuttgart, Stefan Wagner University of Stuttgart
Pre-print Media Attached
19:10
20m
Paper
Program Comprehension and Code Complexity Metrics: An fMRI StudyACM SIGSOFT Distinguished PaperArtifact ReusableTechnical TrackArtifact Available
Technical Track
Norman Peitek Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Sven Apel Saarland University, Chris Parnin North Carolina State University, André Brechmann Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Janet Siegmund Chemnitz University of Technology
Pre-print Media Attached
19:30
20m
Paper
Comparing Block-based Programming Models for Two-armed RobotsJournal-First
Journal-First Papers
Nico Ritschel The University of British Columbia, Vladimir Kovalenko TU Delft, Reid Holmes University of British Columbia, Ronald Garcia University of British Columbia, David C. Shepherd Virginia Commonwealth University
Link to publication DOI Pre-print Media Attached

Thu 27 May

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

06:50 - 07:50
06:50
20m
Paper
The Mind Is a Powerful Place: How Showing Code Comprehensibility Metrics Influences Code UnderstandingTechnical Track
Technical Track
Marvin Wyrich University of Stuttgart, Andreas Preikschat University of Stuttgart, Daniel Graziotin University of Stuttgart, Stefan Wagner University of Stuttgart
Pre-print Media Attached
07:10
20m
Paper
Program Comprehension and Code Complexity Metrics: An fMRI StudyACM SIGSOFT Distinguished PaperArtifact ReusableTechnical TrackArtifact Available
Technical Track
Norman Peitek Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Sven Apel Saarland University, Chris Parnin North Carolina State University, André Brechmann Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Janet Siegmund Chemnitz University of Technology
Pre-print Media Attached
07:30
20m
Paper
Comparing Block-based Programming Models for Two-armed RobotsJournal-First
Journal-First Papers
Nico Ritschel The University of British Columbia, Vladimir Kovalenko TU Delft, Reid Holmes University of British Columbia, Ronald Garcia University of British Columbia, David C. Shepherd Virginia Commonwealth University
Link to publication DOI Pre-print Media Attached