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23rd RE 2015: Ottawa, ON, Canada
- Didar Zowghi, Vincenzo Gervasi, Daniel Amyot:
23rd IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference, RE 2015, Ottawa, ON, Canada, August 24-28, 2015. IEEE Computer Society 2015, ISBN 978-1-4673-6905-3
Keynotes
- Aydin Y. Mirzaee:
You versus users - who owns your roadmap? (keynote). 1 - Karen Holtzblatt:
Can you intentionally design a product that is Cool? (keynote). 2-3 - Michael Jackson:
Requirements, behaviours, and software engineering (keynote). 4-5
Research Track
- Chetan Arora, Mehrdad Sabetzadeh, Arda Goknil, Lionel C. Briand, Frank Zimmer:
Change impact analysis for Natural Language requirements: An NLP approach. 6-15 - Hannes Holm, Teodor Sommestad, Johan E. Bengtsson:
Requirements engineering: The quest for the dependent variable. 16-25 - Alessio Ferrari, Paola Spoletini, Stefania Gnesi:
Ambiguity as a resource to disclose tacit knowledge. 26-35 - Anas Mahmoud:
An information theoretic approach for extracting and tracing non-functional requirements. 36-45 - Sangeeta Dey, Seok-Won Lee:
From requirements elicitation to variability analysis using repertory grid: A cognitive approach. 46-55 - Fatima Alabdulkareem, Nick Cercone, Sotirios Liaskos:
Goal and Preference Identification through natural language. 56-65 - Richard Berntsson-Svensson, Maryam Taghavianfar:
Selecting creativity techniques for creative requirements: An evaluation of four techniques using creativity workshops. 66-75 - Federica Sarro, Afnan A. Al-Subaihin, Mark Harman, Yue Jia, William J. Martin, Yuanyuan Zhang:
Feature lifecycles as they spread, migrate, remain, and die in App Stores. 76-85 - Preethu Rose Anish, Maya Daneva, Jane Cleland-Huang, Roel J. Wieringa, Smita Ghaisas:
What you ask is what you get: Understanding architecturally significant functional requirements. 86-95 - Michael Vierhauser, Rick Rabiser, Paul Grünbacher, Benedikt Aumayr:
A requirements monitoring model for systems of systems. 96-105 - Antoine Cailliau, Axel van Lamsweerde:
Handling knowledge uncertainty in risk-based requirements engineering. 106-115 - Walid Maalej, Hadeer Nabil:
Bug report, feature request, or simply praise? On automatically classifying app reviews. 116-125 - Garm Lucassen, Fabiano Dalpiaz, Jan Martijn E. M. van der Werf, Sjaak Brinkkemper:
Forging high-quality User Stories: Towards a discipline for Agile Requirements. 126-135 - Daniel Aceituna, Hyunsook Do:
Exposing the susceptibility of off-nominal behaviors in reactive system requirements. 136-145 - Hanan Hibshi, Travis D. Breaux, Stephen B. Broomell:
Assessment of risk perception in security requirements composition. 146-155 - Pradeep K. Murukannaiah, Anup K. Kalia, Pankaj R. Telang, Munindar P. Singh:
Resolving goal conflicts via argumentation-based analysis of competing hypotheses. 156-165 - Travis D. Breaux, Daniel Smullen, Hanan Hibshi:
Detecting repurposing and over-collection in multi-party privacy requirements specifications. 166-175 - Patrick Rempel, Patrick Mäder:
A quality model for the systematic assessment of requirements traceability. 176-185 - Dustin Wüest, Norbert Seyff, Martin Glinz:
Sketching and notation creation with FlexiSketch Team: Evaluating a new means for collaborative requirements elicitation. 186-195
RE: Next! Track
Tracing
- Jane Huffman Hayes, Giulio Antoniol, Bram Adams, Yann-Gaël Guéhéneuc:
Inherent characteristics of traceability artifacts less is more. 196-201 - Jin Guo, Natawut Monaikul, Jane Cleland-Huang:
Trace links explained: An automated approach for generating rationales. 202-207
Goals and NFRs
- David Ameller, Xavier Franch, Cristina Gómez, João Araújo, Richard Berntsson-Svensson, Stefan Biffl, Jordi Cabot, Vittorio Cortellessa, Maya Daneva, Daniel Méndez Fernández, Ana Moreira, Henry Muccini, Antonio Vallecillo, Manuel Wimmer, Vasco Amaral, Hugo Bruneliere, Loli Burgueño, Miguel Goulão, Bernhard Schätz, Sabine Teufl:
Handling non-functional requirements in Model-Driven Development: An ongoing industrial survey. 208-213 - Zachary J. Oster, Ganesh Ram Santhanam, Samik Basu:
Scalable modeling and analysis of requirements preferences: A qualitative approach using CI-Nets. 214-219 - Marc van Zee, Floris Bex, Sepideh Ghanavati:
Rationalization of goal models in GRL using formal argumentation. 220-225
Cognitive
- Irit Hadar, Anna Zamansky:
Cognitive factors in inconsistency management. 226-229 - Zahra Shakeri Hossein Abad, Guenther Ruhe:
Using real options to manage Technical Debt in Requirements Engineering. 230-235 - Nelly Bencomo:
QuantUn: Quantification of uncertainty for the reassessment of requirements. 236-240
Risks
- Hermann Kaindl, Roman Popp, David Raneburger:
Towards reuse in safety risk analysis based on product line requirements. 241-246 - Jiale Zhou, Kaj Hänninen, Kristina Lundqvist, Yue Lu, Luciana Provenzano, Kristina Forsberg:
An environment-driven ontological approach to requirements elicitation for safety-critical systems. 247-251 - Paolo Avesani, Anna Perini, Alberto Siena, Angelo Susi:
Goals at risk? Machine learning at support of early assessment. 252-255
Mass RE
- Timo Johann, Walid Maalej:
Democratic mass participation of users in Requirements Engineering? 256-261 - Anas Mahmoud, Doris L. Carver:
Exploiting online human knowledge in Requirements Engineering. 262-267
Frameworks
- Mahmood Hosseini, Alimohammad Shahri, Keith Phalp, Raian Ali:
Towards engineering transparency as a requirement in socio-technical systems. 268-273 - Alexander Borgida, Ivan Jureta, Anna Zamansky:
Towards a general formal framework of Coherence Management in RE. 274-277
Demos and Posters
- Edith Zavala, Xavier Franch, Jordi Marco, Alessia Knauss, Daniela E. Damian:
SACRE: A tool for dealing with uncertainty in contextual requirements at runtime. 278-279 - Markus Fockel, Jörg Holtmann:
ReqPat: Efficient documentation of high-quality requirements using controlled natural language. 280-281 - Tong Li, Elda Paja, John Mylopoulos, Jennifer Horkoff, Kristian Beckers:
Holistic security requirements analysis: An attacker's perspective. 282-283 - Luxi Chen, Linpeng Huang, Hao Zhong, Chen Li, Xiwen Wu:
Breeze: A modeling tool for designing, analyzing, and improving software architecture. 284-285 - Irina Todoran Koitz, Martin Glinz:
StakeCloud Tool: From cloud consumers' search queries to new service requirements. 286-287 - Jaison Kuriakose, Jeffrey Parsons:
An enhanced requirements gathering interface for open source software development environments. 288-289 - Robert Darimont, Christophe Ponsard:
Supporting quantitative assessment of requirements in Goal Orientation. 290-291 - João Pimentel, Jéssyka Vilela, Jaelson Castro:
Web tool for Goal modelling and statechart derivation. 292-293 - Mozhan Soltani, Eric Knauss:
Challenges of Requirements Engineering in AUTOSAR ecosystems. 294-295
Industry Track
- Michael C. Panis:
Reuse of architecturally derived Standards Requirements. 296-304 - Andreas Vogelsang, Henning Femmer, Christian Winkler:
Systematic elicitation of mode models for multifunctional systems. 305-314 - Maria Holmegaard, Jens Baek Jorgensen, Michael Sørensen Loft, Martin Stig Stissing:
Requirements problems in the development of a new user interface for healthcare equipment. 315-323 - David Callele, Philip Dueck, Krzysztof Wnuk, Peitsa Hynninen:
Experience requirements in video games definition and testability. 324-333 - Marja Kapyaho, Marjo Kauppinen:
Agile requirements engineering with prototyping: A case study. 334-343 - Jennifer Krisch, Frank Houdek:
The myth of bad passive voice and weak words an empirical investigation in the automotive industry. 344-351 - Mohammad R. Basirati, Henning Femmer, Sebastian Eder, Martin Fritzsche, Alexander Widera:
Understanding changes in use cases: A case study. 352-361 - Tobias Morciniec, Andreas Podelski:
Using the requirements specification to infer the implicit test status of requirements. 362-371 - Ulf Eliasson, Rogardt Heldal, Eric Knauss, Patrizio Pelliccione:
The need of complementing plan-driven requirements engineering with emerging communication: Experiences from Volvo Car Group. 372-381
Doctoral Symposium
- Antônio Mauricio Pitangueira:
Incorporating preferences from multiple stakeholders in software requirements selection an interactive search-based approach. 382-387 - Maxime Warnier:
How can corpus linguistics help improve requirements writing? Specifications of a space project as a case study. 388-392 - Roeland H. P. Kegel:
The Personal Information Security Assistant. 393-397 - Yudhistira Nugraha:
Security Assurance Requirements Engineering (STARE) for trustworthy service level agreements. 398-399 - Parisa Ghazi:
A magnet-and-spring based visualization technique for enhancing the manipulation of requirements artifacts. 400-405 - Benoît Lebeaupin:
A language for writing system specifications in an aeronautical context. 406-411
Panel Papers
- Jane Cleland-Huang, Mona Rahimi, Mehdi Mirakhorli:
Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology transfer in the requirements engineering domain. 412-413 - Carlos Henrique C. Duarte, Tony Gorschek:
Technology transfer - Requirements Engineering research to industrial practice an open (ended) debate. 414-415
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