Authors
Patrick d'Astous, Pierre N Robillard, Françoise Détienne, Willemien Visser
Publication date
2001/6
Journal
Empirical Software Engineering
Volume
6
Pages
143-159
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Description
Peer review meetings (PRMs) are formal meetings during which peers systematically analyze artifacts to improve their quality and report on non-conformities. This paper presents an approach based on protocol analysis for quantifying the influence of participant roles during PRMs. Three views are used to characterize the seven defined participant roles. The project view defines three roles: supervisor, procedure expert and developer. The meeting view defines two roles: author and reviewer, and the task view defines the roles reflecting direct and indirect interest in the artifact under review. The analysis, based on log-linear modeling, shows that review activities have different patterns, depending on their focus: form or content. The influence of each role is analyzed with respect to this focus. Interpretation of the quantitative data leads to the suggestion that PRMs could be improved by creating three different …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P d'Astous, PN Robillard, F Détienne, W Visser - Empirical Software Engineering, 2001