Systematic Mapping Protocol Feature Modeling Tools
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 19:48 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
This paper defines a protocol for a systematic mapping study on feature modeling tools in software product lines.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The paper establishes a complete protocol for conducting a systematic mapping study to identify and assess relevant papers on feature modeling tools, with extraction focused on application domain, underlying model, origin, empirical validation level, and tool quality.
What carries the argument
The systematic mapping study protocol, which defines the search process, paper selection criteria, and data extraction form for reviewing feature modeling tools in SPL.
If this is right
- The mapping will produce a classification of tools by their primary application domains.
- It will quantify how many tools have undergone empirical validation studies.
- Quality scores will indicate which tools meet basic research standards.
- The protocol can serve as a reusable template for future reviews of SPL tooling.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Execution of the protocol may expose that most tools originate from academic rather than industrial settings.
- The results could highlight under-explored domains where feature modeling support is still weak.
- Practitioners might gain a shortlist of validated tools to consider for adoption.
Load-bearing premise
The chosen search strings and assessment criteria will locate a representative sample of papers describing existing feature modeling tools.
What would settle it
Executing the search and finding that major known tools such as FeatureIDE are absent from the retrieved papers would show the protocol failed to capture relevant literature.
Figures
read the original abstract
The customers and users need for new products and services according to high-quality standards have increased in the last time. In that sense, the production processes must be aligned with the organization and development process in order to achieve this goal. The aim of this paper is to synthesize the current state of the research reported in the literature regarding the application domain, underlying model, origin, degree of empirical validation and quality of existing feature modeling tools used in SPL. Therefore, this technical report presents the protocol definition for a systematic mapping study (SMS) that we will conduct to identify and assess the set of relevant papers on feature model tools.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript presents the protocol definition for a future systematic mapping study (SMS) on feature modeling tools used in Software Product Lines (SPL). The stated aim is to synthesize literature regarding application domain, underlying model, origin, degree of empirical validation, and quality of existing tools; the contribution is the protocol itself rather than any executed search, data extraction, or synthesis results.
Significance. Defining the SMS protocol in advance supports transparency and reduces the risk of post-hoc bias in the eventual study. If executed, the mapping could usefully catalog the state of feature modeling tools and highlight gaps in empirical validation. The protocol format itself is a recognized contribution in evidence-based software engineering when the design is sufficiently detailed.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the phrasing 'in the last time' is nonstandard and should be replaced with 'recently' or 'in recent years' for clarity.
- The title is terse and could be revised to 'Protocol for a Systematic Mapping Study of Feature Modeling Tools' to better indicate the manuscript type and scope.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive review and the recommendation of minor revision. We appreciate the recognition that publishing the SMS protocol in advance promotes transparency and helps mitigate post-hoc bias in the planned mapping study on feature modeling tools.
Circularity Check
Protocol definition with no derivations or load-bearing claims
full rationale
The paper is explicitly a protocol definition for a future systematic mapping study (SMS) on feature modeling tools in SPL. It states its aim as synthesizing literature but clarifies that the contribution is the protocol itself, with no results, data extraction, synthesis, equations, predictions, or fitted parameters presented. No self-citations are load-bearing because no empirical assertions depend on them. The document contains no derivation chain that could reduce to its own inputs by construction, making it self-contained as a forward-looking methodological plan.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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