Collaboration Models in Distributed Software Development: a Systematic Review

  • C. Rocha R
  • Costa C
  • Rodrigues C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Several years ago software development has become critical to the global market. In the past decade, as a reflection of globalization, software companies began to distribute their development processes in different places, creating distributed software development (DSD). With the growing of Distributed Software Development, organizations have attempt to sketch the best possible development structure, in order to improve productivity and quality. The aim of this paper is to present a Systematic Review of Literature to identify which ways of collaboration are commonly used by software organizations where teams are temporal and geographically dispersed, with also different native languages and culture. Further, the research was based on the basic life cycle of the traditional development, and where phases of the project are performed: onsite, distributed/offshore and multi-site. The systematic review have examined 868 papers published between 2000 and 2010.

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C. Rocha, R. G., Costa, C., Rodrigues, C., Ribeiro de Azevedo, R., Junior, I. H., Meira, S., & Prikladnicki, R. (2011). Collaboration Models in Distributed Software Development: a Systematic Review. CLEI Electronic Journal, 14(2). https://doi.org/10.19153/cleiej.14.2.1

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