scholarly journals Decision-making in Software Project Management: A Systematic Literature Review

2016 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 947-954 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Adson O.G. Cunha ◽  
Hermano P. Moura ◽  
Francisco J.S. Vasconcellos
Author(s):  
Omiros Iatrellis ◽  
Panos Fitsilis

This article aims to provide the reader with a comprehensive background for understanding current knowledge and research works on ontologies for software project management (SPM). It constitutes a systematic literature review behind key objectives of the potential adoption of ontologies in PM. Ontology development and engineering could facilitate substantially the software development process and improve knowledge management, software and artifacts reusability, internal consistency within project management processes of various phases of software life cycle. The authors examined the literature focusing on software project management ontologies and analyzed the findings of these published papers and categorized them accordingly. They used qualitative methods to evaluate and interpret findings of the collected studies. The literature review, among others, has highlighted lack of standardization in terminology and concepts, lack of systematic domain modeling and use of ontologies mainly in prototype ontology systems that address rather limited aspects of software project management processes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 80-108
Author(s):  
Vinícius Soares Fonseca ◽  
Monalessa Perini Barcellos ◽  
Ricardo De Almeida Falbo

Software measurement (SM) is a key area to support process quality improvement and project management. Due to the nature of the measurement activities, tool support is essential. Tools can be combined to support the SM process and provide necessary information for decision making. However, tools are usually developed without concern for integration. As a result, organizations have to deal with integration issues to enable communication between tools. Aiming at investigating studies in the literature that report initiatives involving tool integration for supporting SM, we performed a systematic literature review. Twelve initiatives were found. This paper presents the results of the systematic review and discusses the main findings.


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