Monday, October 1, 2012

paper accepted with minor revisions to tse

Local vs. Global Lessons for Defect Prediction and Effort Estimation

Tim Menzies, Member, IEEE,
Andrew Butcher,
David Cok, Member, IEEE,
Andrian Marcus, Member, IEEE,
Lucas Layman,
Forrest Shull, Member, IEEE,
Burak Turhan, Member, IEEE,
Thomas Zimmermann

Abstract—Existing research is unclear on how to generate lessons learned for defect prediction and effort estimation. Should we seek lessons that are global to multiple projects, or just local to particular projects? This paper aims to comparatively evaluate local vs. global lessons learned for effort estimation and defect prediction. We applied automated clustering tools to effort and defect data sets from the PROMISE repository. Rule learners generated lessons learned from all the data, from local projects, or just from each cluster. The results indicate that the lessons learned after combining small parts of different data sources (i.e., the clusters) were superior to either generalizations formed over all the data or local lessons formed from particular projects. We conclude that when researchers attempt to draw lessons from some historical data source, they should (a) ignore any existing local divisions into multiple sources; (b) cluster across all available data; then (c) restrict the learning of lessons to the clusters from other sources that are nearest to the test data.

Download from http://unbox.org/stuff/var/11/gense/gense-v13.pdf

No comments:

Post a Comment