September 1-3, 2021
https://dsd-seaa2021.unipv.it/seaa/index.html
Motivation: In recent years, software engineering has benefitted from collecting, processing, and visualizing large volumes of data that are produced along the software development process, the use of software applications per se, and from the people that are involved in the development and operation of software. By using data stemming from systems that support software development and maintenance (such as JIRA, GitHub, the Maven Repository, etc.), one can track the progress of software development, as well as the quality of software processes and products. Lessons learnt from exploiting the aforementioned data sources through qualitative or quantitative studies are considered extremely useful for software processes’ and products’ improvement. So far, advances in software engineering provide us with progressively improved software development and the ability to continuously deploy software products. However, these new software products, systems, or services create new challenges to their specification, development, quality assurance, and security, where innovative solutions are required. To be able to take the next step in further advancing modern software development, we need to apply research methods and tools for mining, analyzing, representing, and properly using large quantities of software data. The mission of this session is to provide a forum, in which practitioners and researchers can exchange experiences and ideas around software analytics, mining software repositories, software data visualization, and big data systems in software engineering.
Topics of interest include, but are not restricted to:
Special Session Organizers:
Maria Kechagia, m.kechagia@ucl.ac.uk, University College London, United Kingdom
Apostolos Ampatzoglou, apamp@csd.auth.gr, University of Macedonia, Greece
Program Committee:
Francesca Arcelli-Fontana,University of Milano-Biccoca, Italy
Elvira-Maria Arvanitou, University of Macedonia, Greece
Önder Babur, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
Rami Bahsoon, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
Stamatia Bibi, University of Western Macedonia, Greece
Gemma Catolino (Tilburg University and Eindhoven Technical University, NL)
Xavier Devroey (Delft University of Technology, NL)
Davide di Ruscio (University of L’Aquila, IT)
Daniel Feitosa (University of Groningen, NL)
Marios Fragkoulis (Delft University of Technology, NL)
Matthias Galster (University of Canterbury, NZ)
Simos Gerasimou (University of York, UK)
Stefanos Georgiou (Athens University of Economics and Business, GR)
Clemente Izurieta (Montana State University, US)
Valentina Lenarduzzi (Lappeenranta University of Technology, FI)
Zengyang Li (Central China Normal University, CN)
Peng Liang (Wuhan University, CN)
Lech Madeyski (Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, PL)
Matias Martinez (Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France, FR)
Nikolaos Mittas (International Hellenic University, GR)
Dimitris Mitropoulos (Athens University of Economics and Business, GR)
Elisa Yumi Nakagawa (University of Sao Paulo, BR)
Fabio Palomba (University of Salerno, IT)
Alfonso Pierantonio (University of L’Aquila, IT)
Gema Rodríguez-Pérez (University of Waterloo, CA)
Davide Taibi (Tampere University of Technology, FI)