Understanding work practices of autonomous agile teams: A social-psychological review
Paper in proceeding, 2020

The purpose of this paper is to suggest additional aspects of social psychology that could help when making sense of autonomous agile teams. To make use of well-tested theories in social psychology and instead see how they replicated and differ in the autonomous agile team context would avoid reinventing the wheel. This was done, as an initial step, through looking at some very common agile practices and relate them to existing findings in social-psychological research. The two theories found that I argue could be more applied to the software engineering context are social identity theory and group socialization theory. The results show that literature provides social-psychological reasons for the popularity of some agile practices, but that scientific studies are needed to gather empirical evidence on these under-researched topics. Understanding deeper psychological theories could provide a better understanding of the psychological processes when building autonomous agile team, which could then lead to better predictability and intervention in relation to human factors.

Programming

Social psychology

Agile practices

Teams

Author

Lucas Gren

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

University of Gothenburg

Volvo Group

Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing

1865-1348 (ISSN) 18651356 (eISSN)

Vol. 396 LNBIP 227-235
9783030588571 (ISBN)

21st International Conference on Agile Software Development,XP 2020
Copenhagen, Denmark,

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Software Engineering

Applied Psychology

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-58858-8_23

More information

Latest update

11/18/2025