Write a Blog >>
ESEM 2021
Mon 11 - Fri 15 October 2021
Thu 14 Oct 2021 16:07 - 16:14 at ESEM ROOM - Registered Reports Chair(s): Jeff Carver

Context. Pair programming (PP) has been found to increase student interest in Computer Science, particularly so for women, and would therefore appear to be a way to help remedy their under-representation, which could be partially motivated by gender stereotypes applied to software engineers, assuming that men perform better than their women peers. If this same bias is present in pair programming, it could work against the goal of improving gender balance.

Objective. In a remote setting in which students cannot directly observe their peers, we aim to explore whether they behave differently when the perceived gender of their remote PP partners changes, searching for differences in (i) the perceived productivity compared to solo programming; (ii) the partner’s perceived technical competency compared to their own; (iii) the partner’s perceived skill level; (iv) the interaction behavior, such as the frequency of source code additions, deletions, etc.; and (v) the type and relative frequencies of dialog messages in a chat window.

Method. Using the twincode platform, several behaviors are automatically measured during the remote PP process, together with two questionnaires and a semantic tagging of the pairs’ chats. A series of experiments to identify the effect, if any, of possible gender bias shall be performed. The control group will have no information about their partner’s gender, whereas the treatment group will receive such information but will be selectively deceived about their partner’s gender. For each response variable we will (i) compare control and experimental groups for the score distance between two in-pair tasks; then, using the data from the experimental group only, we will (ii) compare scores using the partner’s perceived gender as a within-subjects variable; and (iii) analyze the interaction between the partner’s perceived gender and the subject’s gender.

Thu 14 Oct

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

16:00 - 16:30
Registered ReportsRegistered Reports at ESEM ROOM
Chair(s): Jeff Carver University of Alabama
16:00
7m
Talk
To VR or not to VR: Is virtual reality suitable to understand software development metrics?
Registered Reports
David Moreno-Lumbreras Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Gregorio Robles Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Daniel Izquierdo Cortazar Bitergia, Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
Pre-print
16:07
7m
Talk
Gender Bias in Remote Pair Programming: The twincode exploratory study
Registered Reports
Amador Durán , Pablo Fernandez Universidad de Sevilla, Beatriz Bernárdez Universidad de Sevilla, Nathaniel Weinman UC Berkeley, Aslihan Akalin UC Berkeley, Armando Fox UC Berkeley
Pre-print
16:14
7m
Talk
Adopting Automated Bug Assignment in Practice - A Registered Report of an Industrial Case Study
Registered Reports
Markus Borg RISE Research Institutes of Sweden, Leif Jonsson Ericsson AB, Emelie Engstrom Lund University, Bela Bartalos , Attila Szabo
Pre-print
16:21
7m
Talk
Which Design Decisions in AI-enabled Mobile Applications Contribute to Greener AI?
Registered Reports
Roger Creus Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Silverio Martínez-Fernández UPC-BarcelonaTech, Xavier Franch Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
Pre-print

Information for Participants
Thu 14 Oct 2021 16:00 - 16:30 at ESEM ROOM - Registered Reports Chair(s): Jeff Carver
Info for room ESEM ROOM:

https://www.youtube.com/c/ESEM_Conference