Design Thinking and Creativity of Co-located vs. Globally Distributed Software Developers
Rodi Jolak, Andreas Wortmann, Grischa Liebel, Eric Umuhoza, and Michel R.V. Chaudron

TL;DR
This study investigates how geographic distance impacts collaborative software design, revealing that distributed developers explore problems less but maintain creativity, highlighting the need for awareness and potential compensatory measures.
Contribution
It provides empirical insights into the effects of geographic distance on design thinking and creativity in software development, an area previously underexplored.
Findings
Distributed developers explore the problem space less.
Distance does not significantly affect creativity.
Reduced problem exploration may impact software quality.
Abstract
Context: Designing software is an activity in which software developers think and make design decisions that shape the structure and behavior of software products. Designing software is one of the least understood software engineering activities. In a collaborative design setting, various types of distances can lead to challenges and effects that potentially affect how software is designed. Objective: To contribute to a better understanding of collaborative software design, we investigate how geographic distance affects its design thinking and the creativity of its discussions. Method: To this end, we conducted a multiple-case study exploring the design thinking and creativity of co-located and distributed software developers in a collaborative design setting. Results: Compared to co-located developers, distributed developers spend less time on exploring the problem space, which could…
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