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Main Authors: Gomez, Juanita, Lovell, Emily, Lieggi, Stephanie, Cardenas, Alvaro A., Davis, James
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.18359
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author Gomez, Juanita
Lovell, Emily
Lieggi, Stephanie
Cardenas, Alvaro A.
Davis, James
author_facet Gomez, Juanita
Lovell, Emily
Lieggi, Stephanie
Cardenas, Alvaro A.
Davis, James
contents Open source software development, particularly within institutions such as universities and research laboratories, is often decentralized and difficult to track. Although academic teams produce many impactful scientific tools, their projects do not always follow consistent open source practices, such as clear licensing, documentation, or community engagement. As a result, these efforts often go unrecognized due to limited visibility and institutional awareness, and the software itself can be difficult to sustain over time. This paper presents an end-to-end framework for systematically discovering and analyzing open source projects across distributed academic systems. Using ten universities as a case study, we build a pipeline that collects data via GitHub's REST API, extracts metadata, and predicts both institutional affiliation and project type (e.g., development tools, educational materials, websites, documentation). Applied across the ten campuses, our method identifies over 200,000 repositories and collects information on their activity and open source practices, enabling a deeper understanding of institutional open source contributions. Beyond discovery, our framework enables actionable insights into institutional open source practices, revealing patterns such as missing licenses or limited community engagement. These findings can guide targeted support, policy development, and strategies to strengthen open source contributions across academic institutions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_18359
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Recipe for Discovery: A Pipeline for Institutional Open Source Activity
Gomez, Juanita
Lovell, Emily
Lieggi, Stephanie
Cardenas, Alvaro A.
Davis, James
Software Engineering
Open source software development, particularly within institutions such as universities and research laboratories, is often decentralized and difficult to track. Although academic teams produce many impactful scientific tools, their projects do not always follow consistent open source practices, such as clear licensing, documentation, or community engagement. As a result, these efforts often go unrecognized due to limited visibility and institutional awareness, and the software itself can be difficult to sustain over time. This paper presents an end-to-end framework for systematically discovering and analyzing open source projects across distributed academic systems. Using ten universities as a case study, we build a pipeline that collects data via GitHub's REST API, extracts metadata, and predicts both institutional affiliation and project type (e.g., development tools, educational materials, websites, documentation). Applied across the ten campuses, our method identifies over 200,000 repositories and collects information on their activity and open source practices, enabling a deeper understanding of institutional open source contributions. Beyond discovery, our framework enables actionable insights into institutional open source practices, revealing patterns such as missing licenses or limited community engagement. These findings can guide targeted support, policy development, and strategies to strengthen open source contributions across academic institutions.
title Recipe for Discovery: A Pipeline for Institutional Open Source Activity
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.18359