Authors
Stefanie Betz, Samuel Fricker, Andrew Moss, Wasif Afzal, Mikael Svahnberg, Claes Wohlin, Jurgen Borstler, Tony Gorschek
Publication date
2013/10/9
Conference
Replication in Empirical Software Engineering Research (RESER), 2013 3rd International Workshop on
Pages
15-24
Publisher
IEEE
Description
Conway's law assumes a strong association between the system's architecture and the organization's communication structure that designs it. In the light of contemporary software development, when many companies rely on geographically distributed teams, which often turn out to be temporarily composed and thus having an often-changing communication structure, the importance of Conway's law and its inspired work grows. In this paper, we examine empirical research related to Conway's law and its application for cross-site coordination. Based on the results obtained we conjecture that changes in the communication structure alone sooner or later trigger changes in the design structure of the software products to return the socio-technical system into the state of congruence. This is further used to formulate a concept of a rubber band effect and propose a replication study that goes beyond the original idea of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Betz, S Fricker, A Moss, W Afzal, M Svahnberg… - 2013 3rd International Workshop on Replication in …, 2013