Presentation: "Deception and Estimation: How We Fool Ourselves"
Time: Thursday 16:15 - 17:00
Location: To be announced
Presentation: "Deception and Estimation: How We Fool Ourselves"Time: Thursday 16:15 - 17:00 Location: To be announced
Abstract: Cognitive scientists tell us that we are hardwired for deception. It
seems we are overly optimistic, and, in fact, we wouldn't have survived
without this trait. With this built-in bias as a starting point, it's
almost impossible for us to estimate accurately. That doesn't mean all
is lost. We must simply accept that our estimates are best guesses and
continually re-evaluate as we go, which is, of course, the agile
approach to managing change. Linda Rising has been part of many
plan-driven development projects where sincere, honest people with
integrity wanted to make the best estimates possible and used many
?scientific? approaches to make it happen?all for naught. Re-estimation
was regarded as an admission of failure to do the best up-front estimate
and resulted in a lot of overhead and meetings to try to ?get it right.?
Offering examples from ordinary life?especially from the way people eat
and drink?Linda demonstrates how hard it is for us to see our poor
estimating skills and helps us learn to avoid the self-deception that is
hardwired in all of us.
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Patterns and Agile Expert Linda Rising, Global Presenter
Linda Rising has a Ph.D. from Arizona State University in the field of object-based design metrics and a background that includes university teaching and industry work in telecommunications, avionics, and strategic weapons systems. An internationally known presenter on topics related to patterns, retrospectives, agile development approaches, and the change process, Linda is the author of numerous articles and four books---Design Patterns in Communications, The Pattern Almanac 2000, A Patterns Handbook, and Fearless Change: Patterns for Introducing New Ideas, written with Mary Lynn Manns. Find more information about Linda at www.lindarising.org.
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