Over the past 50 years numerous studi
es have inv
estigated the possible effect that software engineers’ personaliti
es may have upon their individual tasks and teamwork. Th
ese have led to an improved understanding of that relationship; however, the analysis of personality traits and their impact on the software development proc
ess is still an area under inv
estigation and debate. Further, other than personality traits, “team climate” is also another factor that has also been inv
estigated given its relationship with software teams’ performance.
Objective
The aim of this paper is to investigate how software professionals’ personality is associated with team climate and team performance.
Method
In this paper we detail a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) of the effect of software engineers’ personality traits and team climate on software team performance.
Results
Our main findings include 35 primary studies that have addressed the relationship between personality and team performance without considering team climate. The findings showed that team climate comprises a wide range of factors that fall within the fields of management and behavioral sciences. Most of the studies used undergraduate students as subjects and as surrogates of software professionals.
Conclusions
The findings from this SLR would be beneficial for understanding the personality assessment of software development team members by revealing the traits of personality taxonomy, along with the measurement of the software development team working environment. These measurements would be useful in examining the success and failure possibilities of software projects in development processes.
General terms
Human factors, performance.