EASE 2026
Tue 9 - Fri 12 June 2026 Glasgow, United Kingdom

This program is tentative and subject to change.

Tue 9 Jun 2026 11:40 - 11:50 at JMS 745 - Bugs and Defects Chair(s): Giuseppe Destefanis

Despite the operational importance of hot fixes, large-scale evidence on how they reshape routine maintenance workflows, particularly in the era of autonomous coding agents, remains limited. We analyse hot fixes present in over 61 000 GitHub repositories from the Hao-Li/AIDev dataset and find consistent patterns of urgency: reduced collaboration (typically a single contributor), smaller and more targeted changes (median 2-3 commits and files, with <10 line modifications), limited review (often fewer than two reviewers), and substantially fewer test file modifications than regular bug fixes, consistent with their urgency-driven character. Leveraging the same urgency contexts, we examine differences between human-and AI-agent-authored hot fixes, revealing over 10 distinct repair behaviours, thus offering insights into future human-automation collaboration for hot fixing. Our study is the first to empirically analyse hot fix code changes at scale using a repository-level operationalisation of urgency. The comparison of human and agent behaviours delineates their distinct characteristics, providing a foundation for understanding hot fixing in real-world practice.

This program is tentative and subject to change.

Tue 9 Jun

Displayed time zone: London change

11:00 - 12:30
Bugs and DefectsResearch Papers / Short Papers and Emerging Results / AI Models / Data / Industry Papers at JMS 745
Chair(s): Giuseppe Destefanis University College London (UCL)
11:00
15m
Talk
Where did we fail? - Reproducing build failures in embedded open source software
AI Models / Data
Han Fu , Sigrid Eldh Ericsson AB, Mälardalen University, Carleton University, Andreas Ermedahl Ericsson AB / KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Kristian Wiklund Ericsson AB, Philipp Haller KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Cyrille Artho KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
Pre-print
11:15
15m
Talk
Towards Better Static Code Analysis Reports: Sentence Transformer-based Filtering of Non-Actionable Alerts
Research Papers
Tamás Aladics University of Szeged, Norbert Vándor University of Szeged, Rudolf Ferenc University of Szeged, Peter Hegedus University of Szeged
Pre-print
11:30
10m
Talk
Bug-Report–Driven Fault Localization: Industrial Benchmarking and Lessons Learned at ABB Robotics
Industry Papers
Pernilla Hall ABB Robotics, Anton Ununger ABB Robotics, Riccardo Rubei Malardalen University, Alessio Bucaioni Mälardalen University
Pre-print
11:40
10m
Talk
Hot Fixing in the Wild
Short Papers and Emerging Results
Carol Hanna University College London, Karine Even-Mendoza King’s College London, William B. Langdon University College London, Mar Zamorano López Universidad del Atlántico Medio, Justyna Petke University College London, Federica Sarro University College London
Pre-print
11:50
10m
Talk
From TinyGo to gc Compiler: Extending Zorya’s Concolic Framework to Real-World Go Binaries
Short Papers and Emerging Results
Karolina Gorna Telecom Paris and Ledger Donjon, Nicolas Iooss Ledger Donjon, Yannick Seurin Ledger Donjon, Rida Khatoun Telecom Paris, Keith Makan University of the Western Cape
Pre-print
12:00
10m
Talk
Toward an Understanding of Developer Behaviour while Using Bug Localization Tools
Short Papers and Emerging Results
Pablo Diaz Pedreira The Open University, Tamara Lopez The Open University, Michel Wermelinger The Open University
Pre-print
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