@conference {blincoeMSR15, title = {Ecosystems in GitHub and a Method for Ecosystem Identification using Reference Coupling}, booktitle = {12th Working Conference on Mining Software Repositories}, series = {MSR}, year = {2015}, month = {05/2015}, publisher = {IEEE}, organization = {IEEE}, abstract = {Software projects are not developed in isolation. Recent research has shifted to studying software ecosystems, communities of projects that depend on each other and are developed together. However, identifying technical dependencies at the ecosystem level can be challenging. In this paper, we propose a new method, known as reference coupling, for detecting technical dependencies between projects. The method establishes dependencies through user-specified cross-references between projects. We use our method to identify ecosystems in GitHubhosted projects, and we identify several characteristics of the identified ecosystems. We find that most ecosystems are centered around one project and are interconnected with other ecosystems. The predominant type of ecosystems are those that develop tools to support software development. We also found that the project owners{\textquoteright} social behaviour aligns well with the technical dependencies within the ecosystem, but project contributors{\textquoteright} social behaviour does not align with these dependencies. We conclude with a discussion on future research that is enabled by our reference coupling method.}, url = {http://kblincoe.github.io/publications/2015_MSR_Ecosystems_CameraReady.pdf}, attachments = {https://flosshub.org/sites/flosshub.org/files/2015_MSR_Ecosystems_CameraReady.pdf}, author = {Blincoe, Kelly and Harrison, Francis and Damian, Daniela} }