Understanding Collective Social Behavior in OSS Communities: A Co-editing Network Analysis of Activity Cascades
By: Lisi Qarkaxhija , Maximilian Carparo , Stefan Menzel and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps predict when software makers will quit.
Understanding the collective social behavior of software developers is crucial to model and predict the long-term dynamics and sustainability of Open Source Software (OSS) communities. To this end, we analyze temporal activity patterns of developers, revealing an inherently ``bursty'' nature of commit contributions. To investigate the social mechanisms behind this phenomenon, we adopt a network-based modelling framework that captures developer interactions through co-editing networks. Our framework models social interactions, where a developer editing the code of other developers triggers accelerated activity among collaborators. Using a large data set on 50 major OSS communities, we further develop a method that identifies activity cascades, i.e. the propagation of developer activity in the underlying co-editing network. Our results suggest that activity cascades are a statistically significant phenomenon in more than half of the studied projects. We further show that our insights can be used to develop a simple yet practical churn prediction method that forecasts which developers are likely to leave a project. Our work sheds light on the emergent collective social dynamics in OSS communities and highlights the importance of activity cascades to understand developer churn and retention in collaborative software projects.
Similar Papers
Community Engagement and the Lifespan of Open-Source Software Projects
Software Engineering
Helps online projects stay alive longer.
Commit Stability as a Signal for Risk in Open-Source Projects
Software Engineering
Makes computer programs stronger against problems.
Towards Supporting Open Source Library Maintainers with Community-Based Analytics
Software Engineering
Shows how much of a software tool is actually used.