START YOUR REGISTRATION HERE

 

Affective computing is the study and development of systems and devices that can recognize, interpret, process, and simulate human affects, i.e. the experience of feelings or emotions. Over the past decade, research has shown the impact of affective states on work performance and on team collaboration. This also applies for software engineering that involves people in a broad range of activities, where personality traits, moods, and emotions play a crucial role. For successful software engineering projects, stakeholders often need to experience positive affect (such as trust, appreciation, positive feelings associated to rewarding, etc.), to agree on display rules for emotions and moods, and to hold mutual commitment to the project goals. Recently, researchers started to study the role of affective computing and affective states in software engineering. Contributions on this topic are currently being presented and discussed in diverse conferences and workshops due to a lack of a dedicated forum. This workshop aims at creating an international, sustainable forum for researchers and practitioners interested in the role of affect in software engineering to meet, present, and discuss their work-in-progress. High-quality contributions about empirical studies, theoretical models, as well as tools for supporting emotion awareness in software engineering are invited to the workshop, both from academia and industry.

Co-located with