4.5 Article

Using biometric data in software engineering: a systematic mapping study

Journal

BEHAVIOUR & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 9, Pages 880-902

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0144929X.2020.1734086

Keywords

Biometric; psychophysiological; sensors; software development; software engineering; tasks; productivity; systematic mapping study

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior - Brasil (CAPES1) [001]
  2. CNPq [313285/2018-7]

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This article provides a classification and thematic analysis of studies on the use of biometric data (BD) records in software engineering, revealing that over 77% of studies use multiple biometric aspects to analyze tasks performed by developers, with eye-track sensor being the most widely used biometric factor.
The use of biometric data (BD) records promises to advance the software engineering field. The rapid adoption of wearable computing technology has widely increased the amount of BD records available. Several aspects about the use of BD records in software engineering field are unknown, such as body measurements used to support daily tasks, and empirical methods that are used to evaluate their benefits. Consequently, a thorough understanding of state-of-the-art techniques still remains limited. This article, therefore, aims at providing a classification and a thematic analysis of studies on the use of BD records in the context of software development. Moreover, it seeks to introduce a classification taxonomy, and pinpoints research gaps, challenges and trends. A systematic mapping of the literature was designed and performed based on well-established practical guidelines. In total, 40 primary studies were analysed and categorised, which were selected by applying a careful filtering process from a sample of 3930 studies to answer seven research questions. Over 77% of articles use more than one biometric aspect to analyse tasks performed by developers; over 47% of articles used eye-track sensor to analyse biometric factors, followed by brain-wearable sensors with 40%, skin sensor with 22%, cardiac sensor with 20%, and others fewer representatives; most studies analysed had their quality assessed as high; most studies were published in journal. This study provides a systematic map of studies that use BD records in software engineering, thereby serving as a basis for future research.

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