DocumentCode
2868569
Title
In Strangers We Trust? Findings of an Empirical Study of Distributed Teams
Author
Al-Ani, Ban ; Redmiles, David
Author_Institution
Donald Bren Sch. of Inf. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of California, Irvine, CA, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
13-16 July 2009
Firstpage
121
Lastpage
130
Abstract
Trust has long been a contentious issue in human endeavours. It is not readily given nor gained, more so when strangers are involved. It often becomes an issue during distributed development where individuals are expected to interact with strangers they may not ldquomeetrdquo during the project lifetime. Trust was spontaneously raised by respondents in an empirical study of practices within distributed development and is reported in this paper. A qualitative analysis of study data suggests that trust typically becomes an issue in large teams when developers are to deliver an innovative product. We also found that it is more likely to be an issue the greater the diversity (of culture, language, time zone...etc.) within the team. Finally the data also suggests that developers more readily trust an authoritative team member (e.g. team leader), even if remote. Data suggests these factors can act as positive and negative forces to influence trust within distributed teams. These forces are reported in this paper together with proposed approaches that can promote equilibrium of the net forces.
Keywords
distributed processing; human factors; team working; user interfaces; distributed development; distributed teams; human endeavours; qualitative analysis; Collaboration; Computer science; Cultural differences; Data analysis; Distributed computing; History; Humans; Radio access networks; Software engineering; Yarn;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Software Engineering, 2009. ICGSE 2009. Fourth IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Limerick
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-3710-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICGSE.2009.20
Filename
5196926
Link To Document