Sciweavers

ICSM
2009
IEEE

On the use of relevance feedback in IR-based concept location

13 years 11 months ago
On the use of relevance feedback in IR-based concept location
Concept location is a critical activity during software evolution as it produces the location where a change is to start in response to a modification request, such as, a bug report or a new feature request. Lexical based concept location techniques rely on matching the text embedded in the source code to queries formulated by the developers. The efficiency of such techniques is strongly dependent on the ability of the developer to write good queries. We propose an approach to augment information retrieval (IR) based concept location via an explicit relevance feedback (RF) mechanism. RF is a two-part process in which the developer judges existing results returned by a search and the IR system uses this information to perform a new search, returning more relevant information to the user. A set of case studies performed on open source software systems reveals the impact of RF on the IR based concept location.
Gregory Gay, Sonia Haiduc, Andrian Marcus, Tim Men
Added 24 May 2010
Updated 24 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where ICSM
Authors Gregory Gay, Sonia Haiduc, Andrian Marcus, Tim Menzies
Comments (0)