BOTse: Bots in Software Engineering (Dagstuhl Seminar 19471)

Authors Margaret-Anne Storey, Alexander Serebrenik, Carolyn Penstein Rosé, Thomas Zimmermann, James D. Herbsleb and all authors of the abstracts in this report



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Author Details

Margaret-Anne Storey
  • University of Victoria, CA
Alexander Serebrenik
  • Eindhoven University of Technology, NL
Carolyn Penstein Rosé
  • Carnegie Mellon University - Pittsburgh, US
Thomas Zimmermann
  • Microsoft Corporation - Redmond, US
James D. Herbsleb
  • Carnegie Mellon University - Pittsburgh, US
and all authors of the abstracts in this report

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Margaret-Anne Storey, Alexander Serebrenik, Carolyn Penstein Rosé, Thomas Zimmermann, and James D. Herbsleb. BOTse: Bots in Software Engineering (Dagstuhl Seminar 19471). In Dagstuhl Reports, Volume 9, Issue 11, pp. 84-96, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2020)
https://doi.org/10.4230/DagRep.9.11.84

Abstract

This report documents the program and the outcomes of the Dagstuhl Seminar 19471 "BOTse: Bots in Software Engineering". This Dagstuhl seminar brought researchers and practitioners together from multiple research communities with disparate views of what bots are and what they can do for software engineering. The goals were to understand how bots are used today, how they could be used in innovative ways in the future, how the use of bots can be compared and synthesized, and to identify and share risks and challenges that may emerge from using bots in practice. The report briefly summarizes the goals and format of the seminar and provides selected insights and results collected during the seminar.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Human-centered computing
  • Software and its engineering
Keywords
  • automated software development
  • bots
  • chatbots
  • collaborative software development
  • cscw
  • devops
  • nlp
  • software engineering

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