An over-sampling method for analogy-based software effort estimation
Proceedings of the Second ACM-IEEE international symposium on Empirical software engineering and measurement
Comparison of weighted grey relational analysis for software effort estimation
Software Quality Control
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Software cost estimation using analogy is an important area in software engineering research. Previous research has demonstrated that analogy is a viable alternative to other conventional estimation methods in terms of predictive accuracy. One of the important research areas for analogy is how to determine suitable project feature weights. This can be achieved by using an extensive project feature weights search, where the quality measure is optimised. However, this approach suffers similar issues as the brute-force feature selection approach in analogy. We propose a novel method to deal with this issue based upon the use of the Mantel randomisation test. Specifically, we determine project feature weights based on the strength of correlation between the distance matrix of project features and the distance matrix of known effort values of the dataset. We demonstrate the procedure on a specific dataset, showing the use of the Mantel correlation to identify whether analogy is appropriate, and whether the project feature weights can be determined by statistical inference. Our results also show improved prediction accuracy when multiple project features are used with determined weights. Our method, thus, provides a sound statistical basis for analogy.