User Studies of Principled Model Finder Output

Natasha Danas, Tim Nelson, Lane Harrison, Shriram Krishnamurthi, Daniel J. Dougherty

Software Engineering and Formal Methods, 2017

Abstract

Model-finders such as SAT-solvers are attractive for producing concrete models, either as sample instances or as counterexamples when properties fail. However, the generated model is arbitrary. To address this, several research efforts have proposed principled forms of output from model-finders. These include minimal and maximal models, unsat cores, and proof-based provenance of facts.

While these methods enjoy elegant mathematical foundations, they have not been subjected to rigorous evaluation on users to assess their utility. This paper presents user studies of these three forms of output performed on advanced students. We find that most of the output forms fail to be effective, and in some cases even actively mislead users. To make such studies feasible to run frequently and at scale, we also show how we can pose such studies on the crowdsourcing site Mechanical Turk.

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