M
Mark Turner
Researcher at Keele University
Publications - 49
Citations - 8411
Mark Turner is an academic researcher from Keele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Systematic review & Web service. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 47 publications receiving 6856 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic literature reviews in software engineering - A systematic literature review
Barbara Kitchenham,O. Pearl Brereton,David Budgen,Mark Turner,John W. Bailey,Stephen Linkman +5 more
TL;DR: The series of cost estimation SLRs demonstrate the potential value of EBSE for synthesising evidence and making it available to practitioners and European researchers appear to be the leading exponents of systematic literature reviews.
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Lessons from applying the systematic literature review process within the software engineering domain
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report experiences with applying one such approach, the practice of systematic literature review, to the published studies relevant to topics within the software engineering domain, and some lessons about the applicability of this practice to software engineering are extracted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic literature reviews in software engineering - A tertiary study
Barbara Kitchenham,Rialette Pretorius,David Budgen,O. Pearl Brereton,Mark Turner,Mahmood Niazi,Stephen Linkman +6 more
TL;DR: SLRs appear to have gone past the stage of being used solely by innovators but cannot yet be considered a main stream software engineering research methodology, such as often failing to assess primary study quality.
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Does the technology acceptance model predict actual use? A systematic literature review
TL;DR: A systematic literature review based on a search of six digital libraries, along with vote-counting meta-analysis, shows that BI is likely to be correlated with actual usage, but the TAM variables perceived ease of use (PEU) and perceived usefulness (PU) are less likely toBe correlated withactual usage.
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Turning software into a service
TL;DR: The software as a service model composes services dynamically, as needed, by binding several lower-level services-thus overcoming many limitations that constrain traditional software use, deployment, and evolution.