Authors
Amer Al-Rawas, Steve Easterbrook
Publication date
1996/1/1
Source
Proceedings of the first Westminster Conference on Professional Awareness in Software engineering
Issue
NAS 1.26: 203071
Description
The requirements engineering phase of software development projects is characterized by the intensity and importance of communication activities. During this phase, the various stakeholders must be able to communicate their requirements to the analysts, and the analysts need to be able to communicate the specifications they generate back to the stakeholders for validation. This paper describes a field investigation into the problems of communication between disparate communities involved in the requirements specification activities. The results of this study are discussed in terms of their relation to three major communication barriers: (1) ineffectiveness of the current communication channels; (2) restrictions on expressiveness imposed by notations; and (3) social and organizational barriers. The results confirm that organizational and social issues have great influence on the effectiveness of communication. They also show that in general, end-users find the notations used by software practitioners to model their requirements difficult to understand and validate.
Total citations
1998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320245134111041151214151518172491110148368321