DocumentCode
935106
Title
Software project control: an experimental investigation of judgment with fallible information
Author
Abdel-Hamid, Tarek K. ; Sengupta, Kishore ; Ronan, Daniel
Author_Institution
Dept. of Adm. Sci., US Naval Postgraduate Sch., Monterey, CA, USA
Volume
19
Issue
6
fYear
1993
fDate
6/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
603
Lastpage
612
Abstract
Software project management is becoming an increasingly critical task in many organizations. While the macro-level aspects of project planning and control have been addressed extensively, there is a serious lack of research on the micro-empirical analysis of individual decision making behavior. The heuristics deployed to cope with the problems of poor estimation and poor visibility that hamper software project planning and control are investigated, and the implications for software project management are examined. A laboratory experiment in which subjects managed a simulated software development project is reviewed. The subjects were given project status information at different stages of the lifecycle and had to assess software productivity in order to dynamically readjust project plans. A conservative anchoring and adjustment heuristic is shown to explain the subjects´ decisions quite well. Implications for software project planning and control are presented
Keywords
project management; software engineering; laboratory experiment; macro-level aspects; micro-empirical analysis; simulated software development project; software productivity; software project management; software project planning; Computer industry; Costs; Decision making; Defense industry; Industrial control; Job shop scheduling; Laboratories; Productivity; Programming; Project management;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0098-5589
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/32.232025
Filename
232025
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