International Workshop on Envisioning the AI-Augmented Software Development Life Cycle
Jun 26, 2025 • Trondheim, Norway
How might AI transform end-to-end software systems development workflows?
We must collect relevant data now to assess the long-term effects of AI throughout the software development life cycle (SDLC).
Join us for interactive sessions where attendees can collaboratively develop use cases to show how SDLC activities may shift with increased application of generative AI tools. The workshop goals are to
- capture the changing landscape of software development through emerging research results and position papers
- identify key activities needed to make progress towards an AI-augmented SDLC research roadmap through interactive discussions
Collocated with FSE 2025
Important Dates
Paper Submission Deadline
Tuesday, March 4, 2025 (AoE)
Notification of Acceptance
Tuesday, April 4, 2025 (AoE)
Camera-Ready Papers Due
Thursday, April 24, 2025 (AoE)
Authors who have submitted their papers by the March 4 deadline will have a 48-hour grace period to update their submissions after the deadline passes. However, these papers must be submitted by the original deadline in order to take advantage of this grace period.
Participating in the Workshop
Purpose of the Workshop
As the adoption of generative AI-based tools gains momentum, software engineers are facing the reality of envisioning a future where software-reliant systems will be designed, tested, deployed, and maintained with AI-enabled tools playing a greater role than they do today. The analysis of developer data to date reveals that while generative AI tools offer numerous advantages, they are also non-trivial to apply at scale.
In response, the research community has begun evaluating the implications of generative AI for software engineering. Examples range from researching LLMs (large language models) for code or investigating use of foundation models for various software development activities to investigating the democratization of software with prompt-based interactions may replace portions of software capabilities.
While significant ongoing work is attempting to understand how generative AI can improve various software activities, a concerted emphasis on how generative AI impacts the overall orchestration of SDLC workflows is missing. To fill this gap, our proposed workshop aims to galvanize the research community’s focus on the implications of the changing software engineering landscape by understanding how the SDLC is being transformed by automating and enhancing various development stages via generative AI approaches. In particular, the workshop will focus on how end-to-end SDLC workflows may be influenced and what data should be collected to better assess end-to-end outcomes.
Special Issue in Automated Software Engineering Journal
Authors of select papers will be invited to submit extended versions of their work to Springer’s Automated Software Engineering journal. Details to follow.
Submission Guidelines
We welcome the following two types of submissions:
Position Papers: Well-argued position or work in progress articles. (5 pages including references)
Research Papers: Technical research, experience reports, empirical studies, etc. (8 pages including references)
- All submissions must be original and not under review elsewhere.
- Submissions must be formatted following general FSE guidelines
- Papers must be submitted via the HotCRP submission system
Submissions will be peer-reviewed by at least three members of the program committee. Evaluation criteria include originality, relevance, technical soundness, and clarity of presentation.
Organizers
Anita Carleton | adc@sei.cmu.edu
Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA USA
Heiko Koziolek | heiko@koziolek.de
Corporate Research, ABB, Ladenburg, Germany
David Lo | davidlo@smu.edu.sg
Singapore Management University, Singapore
Ipek Ozkaya | ozkaya@sei.cmu.edu
Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA USA
Douglas C. Schmidt | dcschmidt@wm.edu
William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA, US
Program Committee
| Name | Affiliation | Country |
|---|---|---|
| Yuan Tian | Queen's University | Canada |
| DongGyun Han | Royal Holloway, University of London | UK |
| Bowen Xu | North Carolina State University | US |
| Thomas Zimmermann | University of California, Irvine | US |
| Qinghua Lu | CSIRO | Australia |
| Zhongxin Liu | Zhejiang University | China |
| Silvia Abrahão | Universitat Politècnica de València | Spain |
| Zhou Yang | Singapore Management University | Singapore |
| Haoye Tian | University of Melbourne | Australia |
| Zhen Dong | Fudan University | China |
| Maliheh Izadi | Delft University of Technology | The Netherlands |
| Nicole Novielli | University of Bari | Italy |
| James Ivers | CMU SEI | US |
| Luís Cruz | TU Delft | The Netherlands |
| Suvodeep Majumder | Amazon Web Services | US |
| Sarah D'Angelo | US | |
| He Ye | University College London | UK |
| Jules White | Vanderbilt University | US |
| Laura Freeman | Virginia Tech | US |
| Denys Poshyvanyk | William & Mary | US |
| Anne Koziolek | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology | Germany |
| Ahmed E. Hassan | Queen’s University | Canada |
| John Robert | CMU SEI | US |
| Forrest Shull | US DoD Office of the Under Secretary ofDefense for Research and Engineering | US |
| Satish Changra | US |