A Simple NLP-based Approach to Support Onboarding and Retention in Open Source Communities

June 07, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance and Evolution

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Authors Christoph Stanik, Lloyd Montgomery, Daniel Martens, Davide Fucci, Walid Maalej arXiv ID 1806.02592 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 45 Venue IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance and Evolution Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Successful open source communities are constantly looking for new members and helping them become active developers. A common approach for developer onboarding in open source projects is to let newcomers focus on relevant yet easy-to-solve issues to familiarize themselves with the code and the community. The goal of this research is twofold. First, we aim at automatically identifying issues that newcomers can resolve by analyzing the history of resolved issues by simply using the title and description of issues. Second, we aim at automatically identifying issues, that can be resolved by newcomers who later become active developers. We mined the issue trackers of three large open source projects and extracted natural language features from the title and description of resolved issues. In a series of experiments, we optimized and compared the accuracy of four supervised classifiers to address our research goals. Random Forest, achieved up to 91% precision (F1-score 72%) towards the first goal while for the second goal, Decision Tree achieved a precision of 92% (F1-score 91%). A qualitative evaluation gave insights on what information in the issue description is helpful for newcomers. Our approach can be used to automatically identify, label, and recommend issues for newcomers in open source software projects based only on the text of the issues.
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