Cognition in Software Engineering: A Taxonomy and Survey of a Half-Century of Research
Journal article, 2022

Cognition plays a fundamental role in most software engineering activities. This article provides a taxonomy of cognitive concepts and a survey of the literature since the beginning of the Software Engineering discipline. The taxonomy comprises the top-level concepts of perception, attention, memory, cognitive load, reasoning, cognitive biases, knowledge, social cognition, cognitive control, and errors, and procedures to assess them both qualitatively and quantitatively. The taxonomy provides a useful tool to filter existing studies, classify new studies, and support researchers in getting familiar with a (sub) area. In the literature survey, we systematically collected and analysed 311 scientific papers spanning five decades and classified them using the cognitive concepts from the taxonomy. Our analysis shows that the most developed areas of research correspond to the four life-cycle stages, software requirements, design, construction, and maintenance. Most research is quantitative and focuses on knowledge, cognitive load, memory, and reasoning. Overall, the state of the art appears fragmented when viewed from the perspective of cognition. There is a lack of use of cognitive concepts that would represent a coherent picture of the cognitive processes active in specific tasks. Accordingly, we discuss the research gap in each cognitive concept and provide recommendations for future research.

human factors

psychology of programming

Cognition

measurement

taxonomy

cognitive concepts

Author

Fabian Fagerholm

Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, BTH

Aalto University

Michael Felderer

Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, BTH

University of Innsbruck

Davide Fucci

Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, BTH

Michael Unterkalmsteiner

Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, BTH

Bogdan Marculescu

Kristiania University College

Markus Martini

University of Innsbruck

Lars Goran Wallgren Tengberg

University of Gothenburg

Robert Feldt

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Software Engineering (Chalmers)

Bettina Lehtela

Aalto University

Balazs Nagyvaradi

Aalto University

Jehan Khattak

Aalto University

ACM Computing Surveys

0360-0300 (ISSN) 15577341 (eISSN)

Vol. 54 11 226

Subject Categories

Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)

Human Aspects of ICT

Software Engineering

DOI

10.1145/3508359

More information

Latest update

10/26/2023