Investigating Tree Family Machine Learning Techniques for a Predictive System to Unveil Software Defects

Joint Authors

Ahmad, Arshad
Hayat, Bashir
Naseem, Rashid
Almogren, Ahmad
Jabeen, Saima
Shah, Muhammad Arif
Khan, Bilal

Source

Complexity

Issue

Vol. 2020, Issue 2020 (31 Dec. 2020), pp.1-21, 21 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2020-11-30

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

21

Main Subjects

Philosophy

Abstract EN

Software defects prediction at the initial period of the software development life cycle remains a critical and important assignment.

Defect prediction and correctness leads to the assurance of the quality of software systems and has remained integral to study in the previous years.

The quick forecast of imperfect or defective modules in software development can serve the development squad to use the existing assets competently and effectively to provide remarkable software products in a given short timeline.

Hitherto, several researchers have industrialized defect prediction models by utilizing statistical and machine learning techniques that are operative and effective approaches to pinpoint the defective modules.

Tree family machine learning techniques are well-thought-out to be one of the finest and ordinarily used supervised learning methods.

In this study, different tree family machine learning techniques are employed for software defect prediction using ten benchmark datasets.

These techniques include Credal Decision Tree (CDT), Cost-Sensitive Decision Forest (CS-Forest), Decision Stump (DS), Forest by Penalizing Attributes (Forest-PA), Hoeffding Tree (HT), Decision Tree (J48), Logistic Model Tree (LMT), Random Forest (RF), Random Tree (RT), and REP-Tree (REP-T).

Performance of each technique is evaluated using different measures, i.e., mean absolute error (MAE), relative absolute error (RAE), root mean squared error (RMSE), root relative squared error (RRSE), specificity, precision, recall, F-measure (FM), G-measure (GM), Matthew’s correlation coefficient (MCC), and accuracy.

The overall outcomes of this paper suggested RF technique by producing best results in terms of reducing error rates as well as increasing accuracy on five datasets, i.e., AR3, PC1, PC2, PC3, and PC4.

The average accuracy achieved by RF is 90.2238%.

The comprehensive outcomes of this study can be used as a reference point for other researchers.

Any assertion concerning the enhancement in prediction through any new model, technique, or framework can be benchmarked and verified.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Naseem, Rashid& Khan, Bilal& Ahmad, Arshad& Almogren, Ahmad& Jabeen, Saima& Hayat, Bashir…[et al.]. 2020. Investigating Tree Family Machine Learning Techniques for a Predictive System to Unveil Software Defects. Complexity،Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-21.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1143246

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Naseem, Rashid…[et al.]. Investigating Tree Family Machine Learning Techniques for a Predictive System to Unveil Software Defects. Complexity No. 2020 (2020), pp.1-21.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1143246

American Medical Association (AMA)

Naseem, Rashid& Khan, Bilal& Ahmad, Arshad& Almogren, Ahmad& Jabeen, Saima& Hayat, Bashir…[et al.]. Investigating Tree Family Machine Learning Techniques for a Predictive System to Unveil Software Defects. Complexity. 2020. Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-21.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1143246

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1143246