Andrea Janes

SE
h-index29
7papers
261citations
Novelty32%
AI Score36

7 Papers

SEJan 5Code
The Invisible Hand of AI Libraries Shaping Open Source Projects and Communities

Matteo Esposito, Andrea Janes, Valentina Lenarduzzi et al.

In the early 1980s, Open Source Software emerged as a revolutionary concept amidst the dominance of proprietary software. What began as a revolutionary idea has now become the cornerstone of computer science. Amidst OSS projects, AI is increasing its presence and relevance. However, despite the growing popularity of AI, its adoption and impacts on OSS projects remain underexplored. We aim to assess the adoption of AI libraries in Python and Java OSS projects and examine how they shape development, including the technical ecosystem and community engagement. To this end, we will perform a large-scale analysis on 157.7k potential OSS repositories, employing repository metrics and software metrics to compare projects adopting AI libraries against those that do not. We expect to identify measurable differences in development activity, community engagement, and code complexity between OSS projects that adopt AI libraries and those that do not, offering evidence-based insights into how AI integration reshapes software development practices.

SPNov 4, 2022
Climbing Routes Clustering Using Energy-Efficient Accelerometers Attached to the Quickdraws

Sadaf Moaveninejad, Andrea Janes, Camillo Porcaro et al.

One of the challenges for climbing gyms is to find out popular routes for the climbers to improve their services and optimally use their infrastructure. This problem must be addressed preserving both the privacy and convenience of the climbers and the costs of the gyms. To this aim, a hardware prototype is developed to collect data using accelerometer sensors attached to a piece of climbing equipment mounted on the wall, called quickdraw, that connects the climbing rope to the bolt anchors. The corresponding sensors are configured to be energy-efficient, hence becoming practical in terms of expenses and time consumption for replacement when used in large quantities in a climbing gym. This paper describes hardware specifications, studies data measured by the sensors in ultra-low power mode, detect patterns in data during climbing different routes, and develops an unsupervised approach for route clustering.

SPJan 17, 2023
Lowering Detection in Sport Climbing Based on Orientation of the Sensor Enhanced Quickdraw

Sadaf Moaveninejad, Andrea Janes, Camillo Porcaro

Tracking climbers' activity to improve services and make the best use of their infrastructure is a concern for climbing gyms. Each climbing session must be analyzed from beginning till lowering of the climber. Therefore, spotting the climbers descending is crucial since it indicates when the ascent has come to an end. This problem must be addressed while preserving privacy and convenience of the climbers and the costs of the gyms. To this aim, a hardware prototype is developed to collect data using accelerometer sensors attached to a piece of climbing equipment mounted on the wall, called quickdraw, that connects the climbing rope to the bolt anchors. The corresponding sensors are configured to be energy-efficient, hence become practical in terms of expenses and time consumption for replacement when using in large quantity in a climbing gym. This paper describes hardware specifications, studies data measured by the sensors in ultra-low power mode, detect sensors' orientation patterns during lowering different routes, and develop an supervised approach to identify lowering.

SEMar 2, 2021
Mining Software Repositories with a Collaborative Heuristic Repository

Hlib Babii, Julian Aron Prenner, Laurin Stricker et al.

Many software engineering studies or tasks rely on categorizing software engineering artifacts. In practice, this is done either by defining simple but often imprecise heuristics, or by manual labelling of the artifacts. Unfortunately, errors in these categorizations impact the tasks that rely on them. To improve the precision of these categorizations, we propose to gather heuristics in a collaborative heuristic repository, to which researchers can contribute a large amount of diverse heuristics for a variety of tasks on a variety of SE artifacts. These heuristics are then leveraged by state-of-the-art weak supervision techniques to train high-quality classifiers, thus improving the categorizations. We present an initial version of the heuristic repository, which we applied to the concrete task of commit classification.

CRDec 24, 2020
Improving Predictability of User-Affecting Metrics to Support Anomaly Detection in Cloud Services

Vilc Rufino, Mateus Nogueira, Alberto Avritzer et al.

Anomaly detection systems aim to detect and report attacks or unexpected behavior in networked systems. Previous work has shown that anomalies have an impact on system performance, and that performance signatures can be effectively used for implementing an IDS. In this paper, we present an analytical and an experimental study on the trade-off between anomaly detection based on performance signatures and system scalability. The proposed approach combines analytical modeling and load testing to find optimal configurations for the signature-based IDS. We apply a heavy-tail bi-modal modeling approach, where "long" jobs represent large resource consuming transactions, e.g., generated by DDoS attacks; the model was parametrized using results obtained from controlled experiments. For performance purposes, mean response time is the key metric to be minimized, whereas for security purposes, response time variance and classification accuracy must be taken into account. The key insights from our analysis are: (i) there is an optimal number of servers which minimizes the response time variance, (ii) the sweet-spot number of servers that minimizes response time variance and maximizes classification accuracy is typically smaller than or equal to the one that minimizes mean response time. Therefore, for security purposes, it may be worth slightly sacrificing performance to increase classification accuracy.

SEMar 17, 2020
Big Code != Big Vocabulary: Open-Vocabulary Models for Source Code

Rafael-Michael Karampatsis, Hlib Babii, Romain Robbes et al.

Statistical language modeling techniques have successfully been applied to large source code corpora, yielding a variety of new software development tools, such as tools for code suggestion, improving readability, and API migration. A major issue with these techniques is that code introduces new vocabulary at a far higher rate than natural language, as new identifier names proliferate. Both large vocabularies and out-of-vocabulary issues severely affect Neural Language Models (NLMs) of source code, degrading their performance and rendering them unable to scale. In this paper, we address this issue by: 1) studying how various modelling choices impact the resulting vocabulary on a large-scale corpus of 13,362 projects; 2) presenting an open vocabulary source code NLM that can scale to such a corpus, 100 times larger than in previous work; and 3) showing that such models outperform the state of the art on three distinct code corpora (Java, C, Python). To our knowledge, these are the largest NLMs for code that have been reported. All datasets, code, and trained models used in this work are publicly available.

CLApr 3, 2019
Modeling Vocabulary for Big Code Machine Learning

Hlib Babii, Andrea Janes, Romain Robbes

When building machine learning models that operate on source code, several decisions have to be made to model source-code vocabulary. These decisions can have a large impact: some can lead to not being able to train models at all, others significantly affect performance, particularly for Neural Language Models. Yet, these decisions are not often fully described. This paper lists important modeling choices for source code vocabulary, and explores their impact on the resulting vocabulary on a large-scale corpus of 14,436 projects. We show that a subset of decisions have decisive characteristics, allowing to train accurate Neural Language Models quickly on a large corpus of 10,106 projects.