Principles of software engineering management
Principles of software engineering management
Incremental development: review of nonmonolithic life-cycle development models
Information and Software Technology
Enactable models for quantitative evolutionary software processes
ISPW '88 Proceedings of the 4th international software process workshop on Representing and enacting the software process
TRW's Ada process model for incremental development of large software systems
ICSE '90 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Software engineering
The mythical man-month (anniversary ed.)
The mythical man-month (anniversary ed.)
Object solutions: managing the object-oriented project
Object solutions: managing the object-oriented project
Pragmatic quality metrics for evolutionary software development models
TRI-Ada '90 Proceedings of the conference on TRI-ADA '90
Estimating software costs
Software project management: a unified framework
Software project management: a unified framework
Calibrating the COCOMO II post-architecture model
Proceedings of the 20th international conference on Software engineering
Extreme programming explained: embrace change
Extreme programming explained: embrace change
Accommodating uncertainty in software design
Communications of the ACM
Software Engineering Economics
Software Engineering Economics
Microsoft Secrets: How the World's Most Powerful Software Company Creates Technology, Shapes Markets, and Manages People
Software Cost Estimation with Cocomo II with Cdrom
Software Cost Estimation with Cocomo II with Cdrom
Recognizing and responding to "bad smells" in extreme programming
Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Software Engineering
An approach to a theory of software evolution
IWPSE '01 Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Principles of Software Evolution
Operational Profiles in Software-Reliability Engineering
IEEE Software
EWSPT '96 Proceedings of the 5th European Workshop on Software Process Technology
Code Churn: A Measure for Estimating the Impact of Code Change
ICSM '98 Proceedings of the International Conference on Software Maintenance
Production of Large Computer Programs
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Information and Software Technology
Using measurements to support real-option thinking in agile software development
Proceedings of the 2008 international workshop on Scrutinizing agile practices or shoot-out at the agile corral
ENNA: software effort estimation using ensemble of neural networks with associative memory
Proceedings of the 16th ACM SIGSOFT International Symposium on Foundations of software engineering
Software cost estimation using fuzzy logic
ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes
Productivity trends in incremental and iterative software development
ESEM '09 Proceedings of the 2009 3rd International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement
International Journal of Bio-Inspired Computation
Information Goods vs. Industrial Goods: Cost Structure and Competition
Management Science
Comparison of weighted grey relational analysis for software effort estimation
Software Quality Control
Towards quantitative software reliability assessment in incremental development processes
Proceedings of the 33rd International Conference on Software Engineering
A taxonomy of design methods process models
Information and Software Technology
MND-SCEMP: an empirical study of a software cost estimation modeling process in the defense domain
Empirical Software Engineering
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Incremental software development and delivery have been used in software projects in many ways for many years. Justifications for incremental approaches include risk amelioration, the management of evolving requirements, and end-user involvement. Incremental development, including iterative, incremental delivery, has become a norm in many sectors. However, there has been little work on modelling the effort in such development and hence a dearth of comparative analyses of cost models for incremental development/delivery. We attempt to rectify this by proposing a COCOMO-style effort model for incremental development/delivery and explore the relationship between effort and the number of increments, thereby providing new insights into the economic impact of incremental approaches to software projects.