Thomas Fritz, Prof. Dr.

Associate Professor

My research focuses on empirically studying software developers and on using personal and biometric data to improve software developers’ productivity and well-being. By better understanding what software developers need, what they experience, and how they operate on a daily basis, we will be able to provide better and more tailored support to developers as well as improve their productivity and the quality of the software they produce. In particular, I’m interested in:

Working with great students is one of the best parts of my job. I’m currently working with

and mentored and graduated several great students, including (in no particular order)

  • @UZH: PhD students André N. Meyer (Postdoc and industry), Katja Kevic (Microsoft), Manuela Züger (IPT), Sebastian Müller (Zühlke), and MSc students including Catrin Loch, Christoph Bräunlich, Claudia Vogel, Raphael Rosenast, Yves Bilgerig, and Annatina Vinzenz.
  • @UBC: Jan Pilzer (Microsoft), and Anna Scholz (Mozilla).

My research is funded by

My professional activities include (amongst others):

I am teaching courses on Software Engineering, the Software Praktikum, a graduate course on Human Aspects of Software Engineering, a seminar on advanced software engineering, and previously a course on Software Quality with Martin Glinz (FS’12). See the teaching section for more information.

Previously, I finished my PhD with Gail C. Murphy in the Software Practices Lab at the University of British Columbia in 2011. I received my Diplom degree from the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich in 2005 and also worked in the OBASCO research group at the École des Mines de Nantes.

If you are a student interested in doing research in software engineering and in particular in the area I am interested in, let me know. I am happy to talk to you about possible options.