Human-centric discussions in COVID 19 apps
To successfully satisfy user needs, software developers need to suitably capture and implement user requirements. A critical and often overlooked characteristic of user requirements are “humanaspects”, which are personal circumstances affecting the use of software (e.g., age, gender, language, etc.). To better understand how human aspects can impact the use of software, this work presents an empirical study focusing on app reviews of COVID-19 contact tracing apps. We manually analysed a dataset of 2,611 app reviews sampled from the reviews associated with 57 COVID-19 apps. To analyse the reviews, we performed qualitative and quantitative analyses. The analyses characterize the human aspects contained in the reviews and investigate whether the apps suitably address the human aspects. We identified 716 reviews related to human aspects and grouped these into nine categories. Of these 716 reviews, 8% report bugs, 14% describe future/improvement requests, and 22% detail the user experience. Our analysis of the results reveal that human aspects are important to users and we need better support to account for them as software is developed.
- Publication: M. Fazzini, H. Khalajzadeh, O. Haggag, Z. Li, H. Obie, C. Arora, W. Hussain, J. Grundy, Characterizing Human Aspects in Reviews of COVID-19 Apps, 9th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Mobile Software Engineering and Systems 2022 (MobileSoft 2022), May 2022, Pittsburg, USA. -- Final publication available at DOI. Author pre-published version PDF
- Apps: Artifacts for Characterizing Human Aspects in Reviews of COVID-19 Apps
- Dataset: Artifacts for Characterizing Human Aspects in Reviews of COVID-19
Project Team
Dr Omar Haggag, Dr Chetan Arora, Prof John Grundy, Mattia Fazzini, Hourieh Khalajzadeh, Zhaoqing Li, Humphrey Obie, Waqar Hussain
