Jim Herbsleb

Jim Herbsleb

Carnegie Mellon University

H-index: 69

North America-United States

About Jim Herbsleb

Jim Herbsleb, With an exceptional h-index of 69 and a recent h-index of 41 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Carnegie Mellon University, specializes in the field of software engineering, collaboration, CSCW, computer supported cooperative work, open source software.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Power and Play: Investigating" License to Critique" in Teams' AI Ethics Discussions

Novelty Begets Popularity, But Curbs Participation-A Macroscopic View of the Python Open-Source Ecosystem

Novelty Begets Long-Term Popularity, But Curbs Participation

Global software engineering in the age of GitHub and zoom

Understanding information diffusion about open-source projects on Twitter, HackerNews, and Reddit

Matching Skills, Past Collaboration, and Limited Competition: Modeling When Open-Source Projects Attract Contributors

It’s about power: What ethical concerns do software engineers have, and what do they (feel they can) do about them?

Limits and possibilities for “ethical ai” in open source: A study of deepfakes

Jim Herbsleb Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

27077

Citations(since 2020)

6029

Cited By

23440

hIndex(all)

69

hIndex(since 2020)

41

i10Index(all)

150

i10Index(since 2020)

96

Email

University Profile Page

Carnegie Mellon University

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Jim Herbsleb Skills & Research Interests

software engineering

collaboration

CSCW

computer supported cooperative work

open source software

Top articles of Jim Herbsleb

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Power and Play: Investigating" License to Critique" in Teams' AI Ethics Discussions

arXiv e-prints

David Gray Widder

Laura Dabbish

James Herbsleb

Nikolas Martelaro

2024/3

Novelty Begets Popularity, But Curbs Participation-A Macroscopic View of the Python Open-Source Ecosystem

Hongbo Fang

James Herbsleb

Bogdan Vasilescu

2024/2/6

Novelty Begets Long-Term Popularity, But Curbs Participation

Hongbo Fang

James Herbsleb

Bogdan Vasilescu

2024

Global software engineering in the age of GitHub and zoom

James Herbsleb

2023/6

Understanding information diffusion about open-source projects on Twitter, HackerNews, and Reddit

Hongbo Fang

Bogdan Vasilescu

James Herbsleb

2023/5/14

Matching Skills, Past Collaboration, and Limited Competition: Modeling When Open-Source Projects Attract Contributors

Hongbo Fang

James Herbsleb

Bogdan Vasilescu

2023

It’s about power: What ethical concerns do software engineers have, and what do they (feel they can) do about them?

David Gray Widder

Derrick Zhen

Laura Dabbish

James Herbsleb

2023/6/12

Limits and possibilities for “ethical ai” in open source: A study of deepfakes

David Gray Widder

Dawn Nafus

Laura Dabbish

James Herbsleb

2022/6/21

" This is damn slick!" estimating the impact of tweets on open source project popularity and new contributors

Hongbo Fang

Hemank Lamba

James Herbsleb

Bogdan Vasilescu

2022/5/21

Gender and participation in open source software development

Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction

Hana Frluckaj

Laura Dabbish

David Gray Widder

Huilian Sophie Qiu

James D Herbsleb

2022/11/11

Corporate hackathons, how and why? A multiple case study of motivation, projects proposal and selection, goal setting, coordination, and outcomes

Human–Computer Interaction

Ei Pa Pa Pe-Than

Alexander Nolte

Anna Filippova

Christian Bird

Steve Scallen

...

2022/7/4

One-off Events? An Empirical Study of Hackathon Code Creation and Reuse

Empirical Software Engineering

Ahmed Samir Imam Mahmoud

Tapajit Dey

Alexander Nolte

Audris Mockus

James D Herbsleb

2022/12

Trust in collaborative automation in high stakes software engineering work: A case study at NASA

David Gray Widder

Laura Dabbish

James D Herbsleb

Alexandra Holloway

Scott Davidoff

2021/5/6

" They Can Only Ever Guide" How an Open Source Software Community Uses Roadmaps to Coordinate Effort

Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction

Daniel Klug

Christopher Bogart

James D Herbsleb

2021/4/22

Open collaborative writing: Investigation of the fork-and-pull model

Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction

Ei Pa Pa Pe-Than

Laura Dabbish

James Herbsleb

2021/4/22

Hybrid Framing in the Justice for Antwon Rose II Movement

Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW)

Judeth Oden Choi

James Herbsleb

Jodi Forlizzi

2021/12

The secret life of hackathon code

arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.01145

Ahmed Imam

Tapajit Dey

Alexander Nolte

Audris Mockus

James D Herbsleb

2021/3/1

When and how to make breaking changes: Policies and practices in 18 open source software ecosystems

ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)

Chris Bogart

Christian Kästner

James Herbsleb

Ferdian Thung

2021/7/23

The Secret Life of Hackathon Code Where does it come from and where does it go?

Ahmed Imam

Tapajit Dey

Alexander Nolte

Audris Mockus

James D Herbsleb

2021/5/17

Using productive collaboration bursts to analyze open source collaboration effectiveness

Samridhi Choudhary

Christopher Bogart

Carolyn Rose

Jim Herbsleb

2020/2/18

See List of Professors in Jim Herbsleb University(Carnegie Mellon University)

Co-Authors

H-index: 117
Robert E. Kraut

Robert E. Kraut

Carnegie Mellon University

H-index: 102
Kathleen M. Carley

Kathleen M. Carley

Carnegie Mellon University

H-index: 69
Rebecca E. Grinter

Rebecca E. Grinter

Georgia Institute of Technology

H-index: 61
Mary Shaw

Mary Shaw

Carnegie Mellon University

H-index: 46
Laura Dabbish

Laura Dabbish

Carnegie Mellon University

H-index: 46
sandra slaughter

sandra slaughter

Georgia Institute of Technology

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