SEApr 28, 2021

Individual Differences Limit Predicting Well-being and Productivity Using Software Repositories: A Longitudinal Industrial Study

arXiv:2104.13713v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This addresses the challenge of predicting well-being and productivity for software developers, highlighting the need for individualized approaches.

The study investigated whether software repository data could predict developers' well-being and productivity, finding that individual differences dominated predictions, with personalized models achieving up to R²=0.24.

Reports of poor work well-being and fluctuating productivity in software engineering have been reported in both academic and popular sources. Understanding and predicting these issues through repository analysis might help manage software developers' well-being. Our objective is to link data from software repositories, that is commit activity, communication, expressed sentiments, and job events, with measures of well-being obtained with a daily experience sampling questionnaire. To achieve our objective, we studied a single software project team for eight months in the software industry. Additionally, we performed semi-structured interviews to explain our results. The acquired quantitative data are analyzed with generalized linear mixed-effects models with autocorrelation structure. We find that individual variance accounts for most of the $R^2$ values in models predicting developers' experienced well-being and productivity. In other words, using software repository variables to predict developers' well-being or productivity is challenging due to individual differences. Prediction models developed for each developer individually work better, with fixed effects $R^2$ value of up to 0.24. The semi-structured interviews give insights into the well-being of software developers and the benefits of chat interaction. Our study suggests that individualized prediction models are needed for well-being and productivity prediction in software development.

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