Benefitting from the Grey Literature in Software Engineering Research

November 27, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Contemporary Empirical Methods in Software Engineering

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Authors Vahid Garousi, Michael Felderer, Mika V. MΓ€ntylΓ€, Austen Rainer arXiv ID 1911.12038 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 43 Venue Contemporary Empirical Methods in Software Engineering Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Researchers generally place the most trust in peer-reviewed, published information, such as journals and conference papers. By contrast, software engineering (SE) practitioners typically do not have the time, access or expertise to review and benefit from such publications. As a result, practitioners are more likely to turn to other sources of information that they trust, e.g., trade magazines, online blog-posts, survey results or technical reports, collectively referred to as Grey Literature (GL). Furthermore, practitioners also share their ideas and experiences as GL, which can serve as a valuable data source for research. While GL itself is not a new topic in SE, using, benefitting and synthesizing knowledge from the GL in SE is a contemporary topic in empirical SE research and we are seeing that researchers are increasingly benefitting from the knowledge available within GL. The goal of this chapter is to provide an overview to GL in SE, together with insights on how SE researchers can effectively use and benefit from the knowledge and evidence available in the vast amount of GL.
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