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Software Module Clustering based on the Fuzzy Adaptive Teaching Learning based Optimization Algorithm

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 Added by Bestoun Ahmed Dr.
 Publication date 2019
and research's language is English




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Although showing competitive performances in many real-world optimization problems, Teaching Learning based Optimization Algorithm (TLBO) has been criticized for having poor control on exploration and exploitation. Addressing these issues, a new variant of TLBO called Adaptive Fuzzy Teaching Learning based Optimization (ATLBO) has been developed in the literature. This paper describes the adoption of Fuzzy Adaptive Fuzzy Teaching Learning based Optimization (ATLBO) for software module clustering problem. Comparative studies with the original Teaching Learning based Optimization (TLBO) and other Fuzzy TLBO variant demonstrate that ATLBO gives superior performance owing to its adaptive selection of search operators based on the need of the current search.



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Software module clustering is an unsupervised learning method used to cluster software entities (e.g., classes, modules, or files) with similar features. The obtained clusters may be used to study, analyze, and understand the software entities structure and behavior. Implementing software module clustering with optimal results is challenging. Accordingly, researchers have addressed many aspects of software module clustering in the past decade. Thus, it is essential to present the research evidence that has been published in this area. In this study, 143 research papers from well-known literature databases that examined software module clustering were reviewed to extract useful data. The obtained data were then used to answer several research questions regarding state-of-the-art clustering approaches, applications of clustering in software engineering, clustering processes, clustering algorithms, and evaluation methods. Several research gaps and challenges in software module clustering are discussed in this paper to provide a useful reference for researchers in this field.
Software bugs are common and correcting them accounts for a significant part of costs in the software development and maintenance process. This calls for automatic techniques to deal with them. One promising direction towards this goal is gaining repair knowledge from historical bug fixing examples. Retrieving insights from software development history is particularly appealing with the constant progress of machine learning paradigms and skyrocketing `big bug fixing data generated through Continuous Integration (CI). In this paper, we present R-Hero, a novel software repair bot that applies continual learning to acquire bug fixing strategies from continuous streams of source code changes, implemented for the single development platform Github/Travis CI. We describe R-Hero, our novel system for learning how to fix bugs based on continual training, and we uncover initial successes as well as novel research challenges for the community.
Combinatorial interaction testing is an important software testing technique that has seen lots of recent interest. It can reduce the number of test cases needed by considering interactions between combinations of input parameters. Empirical evidence shows that it effectively detects faults, in particular, for highly configurable software systems. In real-world software testing, the input variables may vary in how strongly they interact, variable strength combinatorial interaction testing (VS-CIT) can exploit this for higher effectiveness. The generation of variable strength test suites is a non-deterministic polynomial-time (NP) hard computational problem cite{BestounKamalFuzzy2017}. Research has shown that stochastic population-based algorithms such as particle swarm optimization (PSO) can be efficient compared to alternatives for VS-CIT problems. Nevertheless, they require detailed control for the exploitation and exploration trade-off to avoid premature convergence (i.e. being trapped in local optima) as well as to enhance the solution diversity. Here, we present a new variant of PSO based on Mamdani fuzzy inference system cite{Camastra2015,TSAKIRIDIS2017257,KHOSRAVANIAN2016280}, to permit adaptive selection of its global and local search operations. We detail the design of this combined algorithm and evaluate it through experiments on multiple synthetic and benchmark problems. We conclude that fuzzy adaptive selection of global and local search operations is, at least, feasible as it performs only second-best to a discrete variant of PSO, called DPSO. Concerning obtaining the best mean test suite size, the fuzzy adaptation even outperforms DPSO occasionally. We discuss the reasons behind this performance and outline relevant areas of future work.
Background. Developers spend more time fixing bugs and refactoring the code to increase the maintainability than developing new features. Researchers investigated the code quality impact on fault-proneness focusing on code smells and code metrics. Objective. We aim at advancing fault-inducing commit prediction based on SonarQube considering the contribution provided by each rule and metric. Method. We designed and conducted a case study among 33 Java projects analyzed with SonarQube and SZZ to identify fault-inducing and fault-fixing commits. Moreover, we investigated fault-proneness of each SonarQube rule and metric using Machine and Deep Learning models. Results. We analyzed 77,932 commits that contain 40,890 faults and infected by more than 174 SonarQube rules violated 1,9M times, on which there was calculated 24 software metrics available by the tool. Compared to machine learning models, deep learning provide a more accurate fault detection accuracy and allowed us to accurately identify the fault-prediction power of each SonarQube rule. As a result, fourteen of the 174 violated rules has an importance higher than 1% and account for 30% of the total fault-proneness importance, while the fault proneness of the remaining 165 rules is negligible. Conclusion. Future works might consider the adoption of timeseries analysis and anomaly detection techniques to better and more accurately detect the rules that impact fault-proneness.
86 - Xiang Li , Ben Kao , Caihua Shan 2020
We study the problem of applying spectral clustering to cluster multi-scale data, which is data whose clusters are of various sizes and densities. Traditional spectral clustering techniques discover clusters by processing a similarity matrix that reflects the proximity of objects. For multi-scale data, distance-based similarity is not effective because objects of a sparse cluster could be far apart while those of a dense cluster have to be sufficiently close. Following [16], we solve the problem of spectral clustering on multi-scale data by integrating the concept of objects reachability similarity with a given distance-based similarity to derive an objects coefficient matrix. We propose the algorithm CAST that applies trace Lasso to regularize the coefficient matrix. We prove that the resulting coefficient matrix has the grouping effect and that it exhibits sparsity. We show that these two characteristics imply very effective spectral clustering. We evaluate CAST and 10 other clustering methods on a wide range of datasets w.r.t. various measures. Experimental results show that CAST provides excellent performance and is highly robust across test cases of multi-scale data.
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