App store mining is not enough for app improvement

被引:48
|
作者
Nayebi, Maleknaz [1 ]
Cho, Henry [2 ]
Ruhe, Guenther [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calgary, SEDS Lab, Calgary, AB, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Dept Engn Sci, Toronto, ON, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
App store mining; Twitter; Mobile apps; Topic modeling; Machine learning; Crowdsourcing;
D O I
10.1007/s10664-018-9601-1
中图分类号
TP31 [计算机软件];
学科分类号
081202 ; 0835 ;
摘要
The rise in popularity of mobile devices has led to a parallel growth in the size of the app store market, intriguing several research studies and commercial platforms on mining app stores. App store reviews are used to analyze different aspects of app development and evolution. However, app users' feedback does not only exist on the app store. In fact, despite the large quantity of posts that are made daily on social media, the importance and value that these discussions provide remain mostly unused in the context of mobile app development. In this paper, we study how Twitter can provide complementary information to support mobile app development. By analyzing a total of 30,793 apps over a period of six weeks, we found strong correlations between the number of reviews and tweets for most apps. Moreover, through applying machine learning classifiers, topic modeling and subsequent crowd-sourcing, we successfully mined 22.4% additional feature requests and 12.89% additional bug reports from Twitter. We also found that 52.1% of all feature requests and bug reports were discussed on both tweets and reviews. In addition to finding common and unique information from Twitter and the app store, sentiment and content analysis were also performed for 70 randomly selected apps. From this, we found that tweets provided more critical and objective views on apps than reviews from the app store. These results show that app store review mining is indeed not enough; other information sources ultimately provide added value and information for app developers.
引用
收藏
页码:2764 / 2794
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [22] Exit through the App Store?
    Kind, Carly
    PATTERNS, 2020, 1 (03):
  • [23] What is the Spillover Effect of Punishments on App Store? A Mechanism Research From Apple App Store
    Zhang, Xi
    Wang, Zhe
    Duan, Keran
    Wang, Lei
    Wang, Peng
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT, 2024, 71 : 8103 - 8115
  • [24] Description of Cardiological Apps From the German App Store: Semiautomated Retrospective App Store Analysis
    Albrecht, Urs-Vito
    Hasenfuss, Gerd
    von Jan, Ute
    JMIR MHEALTH AND UHEALTH, 2018, 6 (11):
  • [25] Is the smartphone app accurate enough?
    Ferriero, Giorgio
    Vercelli, Stefano
    Sartorio, Francesco
    Foti, Calogero
    KNEE, 2015, 22 (02): : 145 - 146
  • [26] App Neutrality: Apple's App Store and Freedom of Expression Online
    Hestres, Luis E.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2013, 7 : 1265 - 1280
  • [27] Product survival analysis for the App Store
    Jung, Euy-Young
    Baek, Chulwoo
    Lee, Jeong-Dong
    MARKETING LETTERS, 2012, 23 (04) : 929 - 941
  • [28] Integrated Genome Browser App Store
    Shanbhag, Sameer
    Patil, Riddhi
    Zahara, Noor
    Shetty, Chirag
    Weidenhammer, Rachel
    Watharkar, Sneha
    Tambvekar, Pranav
    Badzuh, Philip P.
    Dias, Chester
    Vankayala, Narendra
    Kulkarni, Prutha
    Vallapureddy, Charan
    Kulkarni, Shamika
    Nikhare, Pooja
    Freese, Nowlan H.
    Loraine, Ann E.
    BIOINFORMATICS, 2022, 38 (08) : 2348 - 2349
  • [29] Causal Impact for App Store Analysis
    Martin, William
    2016 IEEE/ACM 38TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING COMPANION (ICSE-C), 2016, : 659 - 661
  • [30] Product survival analysis for the App Store
    Euy-Young Jung
    Chulwoo Baek
    Jeong-Dong Lee
    Marketing Letters, 2012, 23 : 929 - 941