Browsing by Author "Macit, Yagup"
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Article Auction-Based Serious Game for Bug Tracking(Wiley, 2019) Usfekes, Cagdas; Tuzun, Eray; Yilmaz, Murat; Macit, Yagup; Clarke, PaulToday, one of the challenges in software engineering is utilising application lifecycle management (ALM) tools effectively in software development. In particular, it is hard for software developers to engage with the work items that are appointed to themselves in these ALM tools. In this study, the authors have focused on bug tracking in ALM where one of the most important metrics is mean time to resolution that is the average time to fix a reported bug. To improve this metric, they developed a serious game application based on an auction-based reward mechanism. The ultimate aim of this approach is to create an incentive structure for software practitioners to find and resolved bugs that are auctioned where participants are encouraged to solve and test more bugs in less time and improve quality of software development in a competitive environment. They conduct hypothesis tests by performing a Monte Carlo simulation. The preliminary results of this research support the idea that using a gamification approach for an issue tracking system enhances the productivity and decreases mean time to resolution.Conference Object Serious game plug-in experience for devops(2018) Yılmaz, Murat; Macit, Yagup; Yılmaz, Murat; Tüzün, ErayIn terms of DevOps, efficiency and speed are important dimensions that define customer satisfaction. With serious game applications, it is aimed to make the everyday industrial software efforts more efficient and faster in a competitive environment. DevOps activities potentially could be gamified to provide a competitive environment where the participants are awarded to increase productivity in a software development environment. Defect management is one of the most important components in DevOps activities in terms of customer satisfaction. In order to solve the detected bug in a shorter amount of time, the engineers participate in a competitive environment, commit to a bid to resolve bug faster, where the results are observable by other engineers in a game environment. In this study, the development and game flow of an auction-based serious game application for effective defect management is described.