Abstract:
Millions of developers share their code on open-source platforms like GitHub, which offer social coding opportunities such as distributed collaboration and popularity-bas...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
Millions of developers share their code on open-source platforms like GitHub, which offer social coding opportunities such as distributed collaboration and popularity-based ranking. Software engineering researchers have joined in as well, hosting their research artifacts (tools, replication package & datasets) in repositories, an action often marked as part of the publication's contribution. Yet a decade after the first such paper-with-GitHub-link, little is known about the fate of such repositories in practice. Do research repositories ever gain the interest of the developer community, or other researchers? If so, how often and why (not)? Does effort invested on GitHub pay off with research impact? In short: we ask whether and how authors engage in social coding related to their research. We conduct a broad empirical investigation of repositories from published work, starting with ten thousand papers in top SE research venues, hand-annotating their 3449 GitHub (and Zenodo) links, and studying 309 paper-related repositories in detail. We find a wide distribution in popularity and impact, some strongly correlated with publication venue. These were often heavily informed by the authors' investment in terms of timely responsiveness and upkeep, which was often remarkably subpar by GitHub's standards, if not absent altogether. Yet we also offer hope: popular repositories often go hand-in-hand with well-cited papers and achieve broad impact. Our findings suggest the need to rethink the research incentives and reward structure around research products requiring such sustained contributions.
Date of Conference: 07-08 October 2024
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 19 December 2024
ISBN Information: