Authors
Raian Ali, Yijun Yu, Ruzanna Chitchyan, Armstrong Nhlabatsi, Paolo Giorgini
Publication date
2009/9/1
Conference
2009 Third International Workshop on Software Product Management
Pages
31-34
Publisher
IEEE
Description
Context is a significant factor in deciding the set of requirements relevant to a system (i.e., software product construction), the alternatives the system can adopt to satisfy these requirements, and the quality assessment of each alternative. By context we mean the conditions in the operating environment of an system that influences how the system should behave in different situations. However, the relationship between context and requirements can be challenging to capture and analyze. Presently this area of requirements engineering is largely under-researched. In this position paper, we discuss several ways by which context can be related to requirements and subsequently used for product derivation. We outline an approach that facilitates better understanding and use of contextual information in requirements. Our approach integrates three requirements engineering approaches - goal modeling, feature modeling …
Total citations
201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220233221213122121
Scholar articles
R Ali, Y Yu, R Chitchyan, A Nhlabatsi, P Giorgini - 2009 Third International Workshop on Software …, 2009