Title :
A causal model for software cost estimating error
Author :
Lederer, Albert L. ; Prasad, Jayesh
Author_Institution :
Kentucky Univ., Lexington, KY, USA
fDate :
2/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Software cost estimation is an important concern for software managers and other software professionals. The hypothesized model in this research suggests that an organization´s use of an estimate influences its estimating practices which influence both the basis of the estimating process and the accuracy of the estimate. The model also suggests that the estimating basis directly influences the accuracy of the estimate. A study of business information systems managers and professionals at 112 different organizations using causal analysis with the Equations Modeling System (EQS) refined the model. The refined model shows that no managerial practice in this study discourages the use of intuition, guessing and personal memory in cost estimating. Although user commitment and accountability appear to foster algorithm-based estimating, such an algorithmic basis does not portend greater accuracy. Only one managerial practice-the use of the estimate in performance evaluations of software managers and professionals-presages greater accuracy. By implication, the research suggests somewhat ironically that the most effective approach to improve estimating accuracy may be to make estimators, developers and managers more accountable for the estimate even though it may be impossible to direct them explicitly on how to produce a more accurate one
Keywords :
error analysis; management information systems; software cost estimation; software management; Equations Modeling System; accountability; accuracy; algorithm-based estimating; business information systems managers; causal analysis; causal model; guessing; intuition; managerial practice; performance evaluation; personal memory; refined model; software cost estimation error; software development; software managers; user accountability; user commitment; Costs; Differential equations; Information analysis; Information management; Management information systems; Memory management; Programming; Software performance; Software reusability; Software tools;
Journal_Title :
Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on