Understanding the attitudes, knowledge sharing behaviors and task performance of core developers: A longitudinal study
Sherlock A. Licorish, Stephen G. MacDonell

TL;DR
This longitudinal study investigates how core developers' attitudes, knowledge sharing, and task performance evolve in software projects, highlighting their influence on team success and the importance of supportive communication.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dynamic behaviors of core developers over time and emphasizes strategies to enhance team performance through communication and collaboration.
Findings
Core developers' attitudes linked to project involvement.
Knowledge sharing behaviors influenced by team demands.
Supporting communication channels improve team climate.
Abstract
Context: Prior research has established that a few individuals generally dominate project communication and source code changes during software development, regardless of task assignments at project initiation. Objective: While this phenomenon has been noted, prior research has not sought to understand these dominant individuals. Previous work has found that core communicators are the gatekeepers of their teams' knowledge, and the performance of these members was correlated with their teams' success. Building on this work, we have employed a longitudinal approach to study the way core developers' attitudes, knowledge sharing behaviors and task performance change over the course of their project. Method: We first used Social Network Analysis (SNA) and standard statistical analysis techniques to identify and select artifacts and central practitioners from ten different software…
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