By Bill Curtis, Herb Krasner, Neil Iscoe
Communications of the ACM,
November 1988,
Vol. 31 No. 11, Pages 1268-1287
10.1145/50087.50089
Comments
The problems of designing large software systems were studied through interviewing personnel from 17 large projects. A layered behavioral model is used to analyze how three of these problems—the thin spread of application domain knowledge, fluctuating and conflicting requirements, and communication bottlenecks and breakdowns—affected software productivity and quality through their impact on cognitive, social, and organizational processes.
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