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Title Tracking Human-Centric Controlled Experiments with Biscuit
Authors Fernando Olivero, Michele Lanza, Marco D'Ambros, Romain Robbes
Publication date 2012
Abstract Software is created by humans, for humans. For this reason,
software engineering is---above all---a human activity. Acknowledging this
fact, many researchers perform controlled experiments with human subjects to
evaluate the performance and usability of novel approaches and software
engineering tools. However, the intrinsically non-deterministic nature of
humans introduces a number of threats to the validity of such experiments.
One of them concerns how to record information without influencing the
behavior of the subjects involved. Another one relates to providing means to
assure the correctness of the gathered data, for further pristine analyses
and replication.
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We present Biscuit, a tool that silently records relevant pieces of
information regarding an experiment performed with human subjects. We
present the main features and benefits of Biscuit by showcasing a controlled
experiment of Gaucho, a next generation IDE. Based on our experience, we
discuss the potential of Biscuit and outline future research in this
direction.
Pages 1-6
Conference name ACM Annual Workshop on Evaluation and Usability of Programming Languages and Tools
Publisher ACM Press (New York, NY, USA)
Reference URL View reference page