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Introduction

There are numerous challenges, and rewards, in conducting empirical studies in industry. Challenges emanate from the multi-faceted complexity: in products, systems and services; development, evolution and management processes; vendor-customer models and relationships; organizational settings; business contexts and dynamics; etc. Yet there are rewards for successful studies in terms of utility of the results in real-world situations. Building on the results and momentum of the first two CESI workshops held during ICSE (2013 and 2014) this proposal seeks to hold a follow-on workshop at ICSE 2015. A new element of CESI 2015 is that, beyond the research-methodological focus of previous workshops, we seek research contributions highlighting results of the empirical studies conducted in industry. We believe that this move will: (i) further precipitate empirical research in the software engineering community, and (ii) engage industry participants from the point of view of the utility of the results emanating from empirical studies. A long-term goal of the series of CESI workshops is to create a vibrant research and practice community with focus on conducting quality empirical studies in industry hoping that their results will lead to improved software engineering practices, techniques, methods, processes, technologies, products/systems and services.

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Submission Topics

Workshop Topics Validation of suggestive investigative questions Communication between researchers and practitioners Stakeholder involvement in empirical studies Establishing relationships based on trust and relevance Dealing with threats in organizational settings Interpreting results in industrial contexts Generalising the findings from case studies Designing and conducting a family of studies Impact of industrial settings on the design of, and on conducting, case studies, action research, studies in the field, exploratory studies, longitudinal studies, etc. For example: reconciling researchers' needs for "clean" and complete data and information with practitioners' situations such as missing data, privacy issues, preservation of reputation, etc. Empirical results and their utility in specific industrial contexts (e.g., discovery of multiple components defects and their impact on software maintenance)
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Important Date
  • May 18

    2015

    Conference Date

  • May 18 2015

    Registration deadline

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IEEE Computer Society
Association for Computing Machinery
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