
Registered user since Thu 1 Jun 2017
Alexander Serebrenik is a full professor of social software engineering at the Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands. His research goal is to facilitate evolution of software by taking into account social aspects of software development. His work tends to involve theories and methods both from within computer science (e.g., theory of socio-technical coordination; methods from natural language processing, machine learning) and from outside of computer science (e.g., organisational psychology). The underlying idea of his work is that of empiricism, i.e., that addressing software engineering challenges should be grounded in observation and experimentation, and requires a combination of the social and the technical perspectives. Alexander has co-authored a book “Evolving Software Systems” (Springer Verlag, 2014), “Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in Software Engineering: Best Practices and Insights” (APress, 2024) and more than 250 scientific papers and articles. He is actively involved in organisation of scientific conferences and is member of the editorial board of several journals. He has won multiple best paper and distinguished reviewer awards. Alexander is a senior member of IEEE and a member of ACM. Contact him at a.serebrenik@tue.nl.
Contributions
2026
ICSE
- Negativity in Self-Admitted Technical Debt: How Sentiment Influences Prioritization
- Impostor Phenomenon as Human Debt: A Challenge to the Future of Software Engineering
- Alexander Serebrenik Keynote: Beyond chasing the medals: software development as an Olympic sport
- Self-monitoring of Developers' Emotions: the Case of Agile Retrospective Meetings
- Committee Member in Program Committee within the Research Track-track
- Ethics of Care for Software Engineering
- Reclaiming Software Engineering as the Enabling Technology for the Digital Age
- Session Chair of Human and Social Aspects 12 (part of Journal-first Papers)
- Teaching Emotional Awareness in Software Engineering: Evidence from a Professional Training Program
- What barriers do students experience when trying to contribute to Open Source Software projects?
- Political and Ideological Pressure in Software Engineering Research: The Case of DEI Backlash
- "Making Our Life Less Monotonous" or "Just Tick Things Off": An Exploratory Multi-Method Study of Toil
Mining Software Repositories
CHASE
- Session Chair of Awards, Human–AI Collaboration, and Responsible AI Session & DECS (part of CHASE Program)
- Committee Member in Program Committee within the Doctoral and Early Career Symposium (DECS)-track
- Session Chair of Keynote, Human–AI Collaboration, and Responsible AI Session (part of CHASE Program)
- Session Chair of Opening, Hiring, and Careers Session (part of CHASE Program)
- General Chair in Organizing Committee
- Session Chair of Education, AI and Non traditional codebases, and Closing Session (part of CHASE Program)