SECLMar 31, 2022

On the Evaluation of NLP-based Models for Software Engineering

arXiv:2203.17166v115 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This addresses a methodological gap for researchers in software engineering, highlighting an incremental need for standardized evaluation to enable fair comparisons.

The paper reviewed the evaluation practices of NLP-based models in software engineering, finding no consistent or widely-accepted protocols, with metrics often based on custom choices and interpretations done case by case.

NLP-based models have been increasingly incorporated to address SE problems. These models are either employed in the SE domain with little to no change, or they are greatly tailored to source code and its unique characteristics. Many of these approaches are considered to be outperforming or complementing existing solutions. However, an important question arises here: "Are these models evaluated fairly and consistently in the SE community?". To answer this question, we reviewed how NLP-based models for SE problems are being evaluated by researchers. The findings indicate that currently there is no consistent and widely-accepted protocol for the evaluation of these models. While different aspects of the same task are being assessed in different studies, metrics are defined based on custom choices, rather than a system, and finally, answers are collected and interpreted case by case. Consequently, there is a dire need to provide a methodological way of evaluating NLP-based models to have a consistent assessment and preserve the possibility of fair and efficient comparison.

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