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Nils Brede Moe

Researcher at SINTEF

Publications -  145
Citations -  5208

Nils Brede Moe is an academic researcher from SINTEF. The author has contributed to research in topics: Agile software development & Empirical process (process control model). The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 128 publications receiving 4287 citations. Previous affiliations of Nils Brede Moe include Uppsala University & Blekinge Institute of Technology.

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A decade of agile methodologies

TL;DR: The conceptual structure underlying agile scholarship is delineated by performing an analysis of authors who have made notable contributions to the field and urging agile researchers to embrace a theory-based approach in their scholarship.
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A teamwork model for understanding an agile team: A case study of a Scrum project

TL;DR: Transitioning from individual work to self-managing teams requires a reorientation not only by developers but also by management, and trust and shared mental models are found to be of fundamental importance.
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Challenges of shared decision-making: A multiple case study of agile software development

TL;DR: A multiple case study consisting of four projects in two software product companies that recently adopted Scrum identified three main challenges to shared decision-making in agile software development: alignment of strategic product plans with iteration plans, allocation of development resources, and performing development and maintenance tasks in teams.
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Exploring software development at the very large-scale: a revelatory case study and research agenda for agile method adaptation

TL;DR: An interpretative revelatory case study on one of the largest software development programmes in Norway shows how agile methods were adapted and complemented with practices from traditional methods to handle the scale.
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Understanding a lack of trust in Global Software Teams: a multiple-case study

TL;DR: In this paper, the key factors that cause a lack of trust and the effect of lacking trust and present data from four projects in which problems with trust were experienced were investigated and found that trust is a fundamental factor in determining the success or failure of globally distributed software development.