A Quasi-Experimental Developer Study of Security Training in LLM-Assisted Web Application Development
Mohammed Kharma, Ahmed Sabbah, Radi Jarrar, Samer Zain, Mohammad Alkhanafseh, David Mohaisen

TL;DR
This study shows that targeted security training for developers improves security quality in LLM-assisted Java backend development, significantly reducing weaknesses in key areas.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that a layer-based security training package enhances security outcomes in LLM-assisted web application development.
Findings
Validated weaknesses decreased by 31.5% after training.
Severity-weighted burden reduced by 38.2%.
Critical findings dropped by 79.2%.
Abstract
This paper presents a controlled quasi-experimental developer study examining whether a layer-based security training package is associated with improved security quality in LLM-assisted implementation of an identity-centric Java Spring Boot backend. The study uses a mixed design with a within-subject pre-training versus post-training comparison and an exploratory between-subject expertise factor. Twelve developers completed matched runs under a common interface, fixed model configuration, counterbalanced task sets, and a shared starter project. Security outcomes were assessed via independent manual validation of submitted repositories by the first and second authors. The primary participant-level endpoint was a severity-weighted validated-weakness score. The post-training condition showed a significant paired reduction under an exact Wilcoxon signed-rank test (). In…
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