Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems: reviewing the empirical literature.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems : reviewing the empirical literature. / Manikas, Konstantinos.

Software Business: 7th International Conference, ICSOB 2016, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-14, 2016, Proceedings. ed. / Andrey Maglyas; Anna-Lena Lamprecht. Springer, 2016. p. 63-78.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Manikas, K 2016, Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems: reviewing the empirical literature. in A Maglyas & A-L Lamprecht (eds), Software Business: 7th International Conference, ICSOB 2016, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-14, 2016, Proceedings. Springer, pp. 63-78, 7th International Conference on Software Business, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 13/06/2016. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5

APA

Manikas, K. (2016). Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems: reviewing the empirical literature. In A. Maglyas, & A-L. Lamprecht (Eds.), Software Business: 7th International Conference, ICSOB 2016, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-14, 2016, Proceedings (pp. 63-78). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5

Vancouver

Manikas K. Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems: reviewing the empirical literature. In Maglyas A, Lamprecht A-L, editors, Software Business: 7th International Conference, ICSOB 2016, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-14, 2016, Proceedings. Springer. 2016. p. 63-78 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5

Author

Manikas, Konstantinos. / Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems : reviewing the empirical literature. Software Business: 7th International Conference, ICSOB 2016, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-14, 2016, Proceedings. editor / Andrey Maglyas ; Anna-Lena Lamprecht. Springer, 2016. pp. 63-78

Bibtex

@inproceedings{49db07136b26416fa8c720ccc3dc6f78,
title = "Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems: reviewing the empirical literature.",
abstract = "The field of software ecosystems is gradually transiting towards an established means of software development and distribution, counting numerous areas of applicability. However, research in software ecosystems, although the activity of over 10 years, is still characterized as premature with significant lack of software ecosystem specific theories that are solid, mature, generic, and detailed enough to be measurable and transferable. In this study, we intent to come closer to an evolution of the field by supporting the “localization” of research, i.e. the focus on specific types of software ecosystems. To do so, we investigate the literature of empirical, non open source ecosystem studies and intent to identify the various aspects and perspectives studied.In total, we review 56 empirical studies that investigate 55 software ecosystems. Our analysis confirms the assumption that proprietary software ecosystem studies lack deeper investigation of technical and collaborative aspects. Moreover, we identify an increased focus on organizational aspects and a rather limited focus on business. Furthermore, we identify common technology as the component investigated most in the ecosystems, both from the technical aspects, but also as means of applying orchestration. Finally, comparing the main areas with the overall ecosystem literature, we identify that empirical studies lack representation of health, motivation, actor activity, reusability, integration, and quality of ecosystems.",
author = "Konstantinos Manikas",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-319-40514-8",
pages = "63--78",
editor = "Andrey Maglyas and Anna-Lena Lamprecht",
booktitle = "Software Business",
publisher = "Springer",
address = "Switzerland",
note = "null ; Conference date: 13-06-2016 Through 14-06-2016",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Supporting the evolution of research in software ecosystems

AU - Manikas, Konstantinos

N1 - Conference code: 7

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - The field of software ecosystems is gradually transiting towards an established means of software development and distribution, counting numerous areas of applicability. However, research in software ecosystems, although the activity of over 10 years, is still characterized as premature with significant lack of software ecosystem specific theories that are solid, mature, generic, and detailed enough to be measurable and transferable. In this study, we intent to come closer to an evolution of the field by supporting the “localization” of research, i.e. the focus on specific types of software ecosystems. To do so, we investigate the literature of empirical, non open source ecosystem studies and intent to identify the various aspects and perspectives studied.In total, we review 56 empirical studies that investigate 55 software ecosystems. Our analysis confirms the assumption that proprietary software ecosystem studies lack deeper investigation of technical and collaborative aspects. Moreover, we identify an increased focus on organizational aspects and a rather limited focus on business. Furthermore, we identify common technology as the component investigated most in the ecosystems, both from the technical aspects, but also as means of applying orchestration. Finally, comparing the main areas with the overall ecosystem literature, we identify that empirical studies lack representation of health, motivation, actor activity, reusability, integration, and quality of ecosystems.

AB - The field of software ecosystems is gradually transiting towards an established means of software development and distribution, counting numerous areas of applicability. However, research in software ecosystems, although the activity of over 10 years, is still characterized as premature with significant lack of software ecosystem specific theories that are solid, mature, generic, and detailed enough to be measurable and transferable. In this study, we intent to come closer to an evolution of the field by supporting the “localization” of research, i.e. the focus on specific types of software ecosystems. To do so, we investigate the literature of empirical, non open source ecosystem studies and intent to identify the various aspects and perspectives studied.In total, we review 56 empirical studies that investigate 55 software ecosystems. Our analysis confirms the assumption that proprietary software ecosystem studies lack deeper investigation of technical and collaborative aspects. Moreover, we identify an increased focus on organizational aspects and a rather limited focus on business. Furthermore, we identify common technology as the component investigated most in the ecosystems, both from the technical aspects, but also as means of applying orchestration. Finally, comparing the main areas with the overall ecosystem literature, we identify that empirical studies lack representation of health, motivation, actor activity, reusability, integration, and quality of ecosystems.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5

DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-40515-5_5

M3 - Article in proceedings

SN - 978-3-319-40514-8

SP - 63

EP - 78

BT - Software Business

A2 - Maglyas, Andrey

A2 - Lamprecht, Anna-Lena

PB - Springer

Y2 - 13 June 2016 through 14 June 2016

ER -

ID: 167586570