Treat societally impactful scientific insights as open-source software artifacts
So far, the relationship between open science and software engineering expertise has largely focused on the open release of software engineering research insights and reproducible artefacts, in the form of open-access papers, open data, and open-source tools and libraries. In this position paper, we draw attention to another perspective: scientific insight itself is a complex and collaborative artifact under continuous development and in need of continuous quality assurance, and as such, has many parallels to software artifacts. Considering current calls for more open, collaborative and reproducible science, increasing demands for public accountability on matters of scientific integrity and credibility, methodological challenges coming with transdisciplinary science, political and communication tensions when scientific insight on societally relevant topics is to be translated to policy, and struggles to incentivize and reward academics who truly want to move into these directions beyond traditional publishing habits and cultures, we make the parallels between the emerging open science requirements and concepts already well-known in (open-source) software engineering research more explicit. We argue that the societal impact of software engineering expertise can reach far beyond the software engineering research community, and call upon the community members to pro-actively help driving the necessary systems and cultural changes towards more open and accountable research.
Fri 19 MayDisplayed time zone: Hobart change
15:45 - 17:15 | Software ecosystemsSEET - Software Engineering Education and Training / Technical Track / DEMO - Demonstrations / Journal-First Papers / SEIP - Software Engineering in Practice / SEIS - Software Engineering in Society at Meeting Room 110 Chair(s): Sebastian Baltes SAP SE & University of Adelaide | ||
15:45 7mTalk | Upstream Bug Management in Linux Distributions - An Empirical Study of Debian and Fedora Practices Journal-First Papers Jiahuei Lin Queen’s University Software Analysis and Intelligence Lab (SAIL), Canada, Haoxiang Zhang Centre for Software Excellence at Huawei Canada, Bram Adams Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Ahmed E. Hassan Queen’s University | ||
15:52 7mVision and Emerging Results | Treat societally impactful scientific insights as open-source software artifacts SEIS - Software Engineering in Society Cynthia C. S. Liem Delft University of Technology, Andrew M. Demetriou Delft University of Technology Pre-print | ||
16:00 15mTalk | Rules of Engagement: Why and How Companies Participate in OSS Technical Track Mariam Guizani Oregon State University, Aileen Abril Castro-Guzman Oregon State University, Anita Sarma Oregon State University, Igor Steinmacher Northern Arizona University Pre-print | ||
16:15 15mPaper | An Empirical Study on Software Bill of Materials: Where We Stand and the Road Ahead Technical Track Boming Xia CSIRO's Data61 & University of New South Wales, Tingting Bi Data61, CSIRO, Zhenchang Xing , Qinghua Lu CSIRO’s Data61, Liming Zhu CSIRO’s Data61 Pre-print | ||
16:30 15mTalk | Open Source Software Onboarding as a University Course: An Experience Report SEET - Software Engineering Education and Training Hao He Peking University, Minghui Zhou Peking University, Qingye Wang Peking University, China, Jingyue Li Norwegian University of Science and Technology Pre-print | ||
16:45 15mTalk | An Empirical Study of License Conflict in Free and Open Source Software SEIP - Software Engineering in Practice Xing Cui Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Jingzheng Wu Institute of Software, The Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yanjun Wu Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xu Wang Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tianyue Luo , Sheng Qu Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xiang Ling Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Mutian Yang | ||
17:00 7mTalk | LicenseRec: Knowledge based Open Source License Recommendation for OSS Projects DEMO - Demonstrations Weiwei Xu Peking University, Xin Wu Peking University, Runzhi He Peking University, Minghui Zhou Peking University Pre-print | ||
17:07 7mTalk | Will you come back to contribute? Investigating the inactivity of OSS core developers in GitHub Journal-First Papers Fabio Calefato University of Bari, Marco Gerosa Northern Arizona University, Giuseppe Iaffaldano University of Bari, Filippo Lanubile University of Bari, Igor Steinmacher Northern Arizona University Link to publication DOI Pre-print |