The 33rd IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering (SANER 2026), held in Limassol, Cyprus, from March 17 to 20, placed fresh emphasis on the Reproducibility Studies and Negative Results (RENE) Track. This dedicated track encourages researchers to reproduce prior findings and to publish studies that report important negative or null results, addressing long-standing challenges in software engineering research.
UAE-based institutions featured prominently through affiliations in accepted papers and participation aligned with the conference’s open science policy. New York University Abu Dhabi and the Technology Innovation Institute in Abu Dhabi contributed work that resonates with the RENE goals of transparency and rigorous validation.
Background on SANER and the RENE Track
SANER serves as the premier venue for research on recovering information from existing software and systems. The 2026 edition reinforced its commitment to open science by promoting disclosure of data and artifacts to support reproducibility. The RENE Track specifically invites submissions that either replicate earlier studies or present negative outcomes with clear implications for the field.
Reproducibility remains a critical issue in software engineering. Many published results prove difficult to replicate due to incomplete reporting, proprietary tools, or environmental differences. Negative results, meanwhile, often go unpublished, creating a biased literature that overstates positive findings. The RENE Track directly tackles these gaps by providing a venue for such contributions.
UAE Institutional Participation
Researchers affiliated with New York University Abu Dhabi appeared in the program with work examining Android app repackaging resilience. Technology Innovation Institute researchers contributed to studies assessing large language models for verifying concurrent programs. These contributions align with broader UAE efforts to strengthen research integrity and international collaboration in computer science.
UAE universities and research centers have expanded their focus on software engineering and applied computing in recent years. Participation in international conferences like SANER signals growing capacity for high-quality, reproducible research that meets global standards.
Key Themes from the RENE Track
Accepted papers at SANER 2026 addressed systematic frameworks for evaluating software resilience and the reliability of AI-assisted verification techniques. Such topics directly support the goals of reproducibility by providing transparent methodologies and highlighting limitations in current approaches.
Discussions at the conference underscored the value of publishing negative results. Researchers noted that null findings can prevent wasted effort on ineffective techniques and guide future work toward more promising directions. UAE contributors brought perspectives informed by regional challenges in software development and cybersecurity.
Implications for UAE Higher Education
The visibility of UAE institutions at SANER 2026 strengthens the country’s position in global academic networks. For universities such as New York University Abu Dhabi, such participation supports faculty recruitment, student training, and partnerships with international collaborators.
Administrators and research offices in the UAE can draw lessons from the RENE Track. Encouraging faculty to pursue reproducibility studies and to report negative results can improve research quality and funding competitiveness. Institutions may consider internal workshops or incentives aligned with open science principles.
Challenges and Opportunities
Reproducibility efforts face practical hurdles, including access to datasets, computational resources, and standardized reporting formats. Negative results can be harder to publish in top venues, even with dedicated tracks. UAE researchers are well positioned to address these issues through targeted investments in research infrastructure.
Opportunities exist for cross-institutional collaborations within the UAE and with partners in Europe, North America, and Asia. Shared repositories and joint reproducibility initiatives could amplify impact.
Future Outlook
As SANER and similar conferences continue to prioritize reproducibility, UAE higher education institutions have an opportunity to lead in this area. Continued participation in 2027 and beyond can build on the foundation established in 2026.
Policy support from federal and emirate-level bodies, combined with university-level initiatives, will be essential. The emphasis on negative results also aligns with broader calls for research integrity across disciplines.
Actionable Insights for Stakeholders
Faculty members can prioritize transparent reporting and consider submitting to reproducibility-focused tracks. Graduate students benefit from training in replication studies as part of their research methodology.
University administrators should review internal policies on data sharing and publication incentives. Research funding agencies in the UAE can incorporate reproducibility criteria into grant evaluations.
Industry partners in the UAE’s growing technology sector stand to gain from more reliable published findings, reducing risks associated with adopting unverified techniques.
