4.6 Article

Impact of Software Engineering Research in Practice: A Patent and Author Survey Analysis

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 2020-2038

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TSE.2022.3208210

Keywords

Software; Patents; Industries; Companies; Software engineering; Interviews; Collaboration; practical impact; empirical study; survey; patent citations

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study analyzed SE papers and patents to examine the impact of SE research on industry. The research found that SE research has provided practitioners with tools, processes, and methods, and has improved existing products. Further empirical studies are needed to support the need for increased funding for SE research. A formal definition of impact should be agreed upon by academia and industry to guide future research.
Existing work on the practical impact of software engineering (SE) research examines industrial relevance rather than adoption of study results, hence the question of how results have been practically applied remains open. To answer this and investigate the outcomes of impactful research, we performed a quantitative and qualitative analysis of 4 354 SE patents citing 1 690 SE papers published in four leading SE venues between 1975-2017. Moreover, we conducted a survey on 475 authors of 593 top-cited and awarded publications, achieving 26% response rate. Overall, researchers have equipped practitioners with various tools, processes, and methods, and improved many existing products. SE practice values knowledge-seeking research and is impacted by diverse cross-disciplinary SE areas. Practitioner-oriented publication venues appear more impactful than researcher-oriented ones, while industry-related tracks in conferences could enhance their impact. Some research works did not reach a wide footprint due to limited funding resources or unfavorable cost-benefit trade-off of the proposed solutions. The need for higher SE research funding could be corroborated through a dedicated empirical study. In general, the assessment of impact is subject to its definition. Therefore, academia and industry could jointly agree on a formal description to set a common ground for subsequent research on the topic.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available