Publication | Open Access
Are Bullies More Productive? Empirical Study of Affectiveness vs. Issue Fixing Time
116
Citations
24
References
2015
Year
Unknown Venue
Software MaintenanceJira IssueEngineeringAffective DesignAffective VariablePsychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyProject ManagementSoftware EngineeringCommunicationPsychologyHuman AffectivenessSocial SciencesEmotional ResponseBehavior ManagementAffective ComputingIssue Fixing TimeBehavioral SciencesEmpirical StudyBullyingSocial ImpactUser FeedbackApplied Social PsychologyPositive ComputingSoftware DevelopmentInterpersonal CommunicationSocial BehaviorSocial ComputingAre BulliesHuman-computer InteractionEmotionAggression
Human Affectiveness, i.e., The emotional state of a person, plays a crucial role in many domains where it can make or break a team's ability to produce successful products. Software development is a collaborative activity as well, yet there is little information on how affectiveness impacts software productivity. As a first measure of this impact, this paper analyzes the relation between sentiment, emotions and politeness of developers in more than 560K Jira comments with the time to fix a Jira issue. We found that the happier developers are (expressing emotions such as JOY and LOVE in their comments), the shorter the issue fixing time is likely to be. In contrast, negative emotions such as SADNESS, are linked with longer issue fixing time. Politeness plays a more complex role and we empirically analyze its impact on developers' productivity.
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