Mood independent programming

Iftikhar Ahmed Khan, Robert M. Hierons, Willem-Paul Brinkman. Mood independent programming. In Willem-Paul Brinkman, Dong-Han Ham, B. L. William Wong, editors, Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics: invent! explore!, ECCE 2007, London, UK, August 28-31, 2007. Volume 250 of ACM International Conference Proceeding Series, pages 269-272, ACM, 2007. [doi]

Abstract

Motivation – The motivation behind this study is to improve the programmer’s coding and debugging performance by considering their moods.

Research approach – This study will use an empirical research approach that involves the use of un-controlled and controlled experimentation.

Findings/Design – The main findings suggest that there is a possible effect of moods on the performance of the programmers’ coding and debugging activities.

Take away message – Moods may have an impact on programmer’s performance. It may be possible to detect moods on the basis of information regarding the programmer’s use of the keyboard and mouse, and to integrate them into development environments that can improve programmer performance.

Technical report

The following is a technical report version of this publication:

Predecessors

The following are older variants of this publication: