default search action
RE 2003: Monterey Bay, CA, USA
- 11th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering (RE 2003), 8-12 September 2003, Monterey Bay, CA, USA. IEEE Computer Society 2003, ISBN 0-7695-1980-6
Keynote Addresses
- Vinton G. Cerf:
Requirements for the Internet. 3-4 - Steven B. Lipner:
The Journey Toward Secure Systems: Achieving Assurance. 5 - Heinz Stoewer:
Modern Systems Engineering: A Driving Force for Industrial Competitivity! 6
Technical Papers
Session P1: Requirements Evolution
- Mark Bergman, Gloria Mark:
In Situ Requirements Analysis: A Deeper Examination of the Relationship between Requirements Determination and Project Selection. 11-22 - David Bush, Anthony Finkelstein:
Requirements Stability Assessment Using Scenarios. 23-32 - Robyn R. Lutz, Ines Carmen Mikulski:
Resolving Requirements Discovery in Testing and Operations. 33-
Session P2: Requirements for Business Systems
- Maya Daneva:
Lessons Learnt from Five Years of Experience in ERP Requirements Engineering. 45-54 - Jens Bæk Jørgensen, Claus Bossen:
Requirements Engineering for a Pervasive Health Care System. 55-64 - William N. Robinson:
Monitoring Web Service Requirements. 65-74 - Fábio Rilston Silva Paim, Jaelson Castro:
DWARF: AN Approach for Requirements Definition and Management of Data Warehouse Systems. 75-
Session P3: Combining Formal and Informal Techniques
- Chi-Sheng Shih, Jane W.-S. Liu:
Acquiring and Incorporating State-Dependent Timing Requirements. 87-94 - Bikram Sengupta, Rance Cleaveland:
Refinement-Based Requirements Modeling Using TriggeredMessage Sequence Charts. 95-104 - Ariel Fuxman, Lin Liu, Marco Pistore, Marco Roveri, John Mylopoulos:
Specifying and Analyzing Early Requirements: Some Experimental Results. 105-
Session P4: Goal-Driven Requirements
- Bowen Hui, Sotirios Liaskos, John Mylopoulos:
Requirements Analysis for Customizable Software Goals-Skills-Preferences Framework. 117-126 - Davide Bolchini, Paolo Paolini, Giovanni Randazzo:
Adding Hypermedia Requirements to Goal-Driven Analysis. 127-137 - Jane Huffman Hayes, Alex Dekhtyar, James Osborne:
Improving Requirements Tracing via Information Retrieval. 138-
Session P5: Requirements Elicitation (1)
- Lin Liu, Eric S. K. Yu, John Mylopoulos:
Security and Privacy Requirements Analysis within a Social Setting. 151-161 - H. Dominic Covvey, David Zitner, Daniel M. Berry, Donald D. Cowan, Michael A. Shepherd:
Formal Structure for Specifying the Content and Quality of the Electronic Health Record. 162-168 - Ann M. Hickey, Alan M. Davis:
Elicitation Technique Selection: How Do Experts Do It? 169-
Session P6: Making Formal Techniques Usable
- Jon G. Hall, Lucia Rapanotti:
A Reference Model for Requirements Engineering. 181-187 - Jianwei Niu, Joanne M. Atlee, Nancy A. Day:
Understanding and Comparing Model-Based Specification Notations. 188-199 - Renaud De Landtsheer, Emmanuel Letier, Axel van Lamsweerde:
Deriving Tabular Event-Based Specifications from Goal-Oriented Requirements Models. 200-
Session P7: Requirements Elicitation (2)
- Alistair Mavin, Neil A. M. Maiden:
Determining Socio-Technical Systems Requirements: Experiences with Generating and Walking through Scenarios. 213-222 - Pericles Loucopoulos, Kostas Zografos, Nikos Prekas:
Requirements Elicitation for the Design of Venue Operations for the Athens Olympic Games. 223-232 - Didar Zowghi, Suresh Paryani:
Teaching Requirements Engineering through Role Playing: Lessons Learnt. 233-
Session P8: Requirements Prioritizing and Negotiatio
- Lars Hagge, Jens Kreutzkamp:
A Benchmarking Method for Information Systems. 245 - Björn Regnell, Lena Karlsson, Martin Höst:
An Analytical Model for Requirements Selection Quality Evaluation in Product Software Development. 254-263 - Alistair G. Sutcliffe, Wei-Chun Chang, Richard Neville:
Evolutionary Requirements Analysis. 264-
Industry Session 1: Requirements Analysis
- Mary Deraitus, Ann Miller:
Customer Requirements and User Requirements: Why the Discrepancies. 279 - Brian Berenbach:
Evaluating the Quality of a UML Business Model. 280 - Raymond J. Barnes:
Using Convergent Design Processes to Surface Hidden Ambiguity and Conflict in Requirements. 281
Industry Session 2: Requirements Gathering
- Mikio Aoyama, Kenichiro Watanabe, Yu Nishio, Yasuyuki Moriwaki:
Embracing Requirements Variety for e-Governments Based on Multiple Product-Lines Frameworks. 285 - Erik Simmons:
From Requirements to Release Criteria: Specifying, Monitoring, and Demonstrating Product Quality. 286 - Brian Berenbach:
The Automated Extraction of Requirements from UML Models. 287
Industry Session 3: Metrics & Measurement
- Doron Becker:
Measuring Requirements Traceability from Multiple Angels at Multiple Lifecycle Entry Points. 291 - Roy Chardon, Merlin Dorfman:
One Approach to the Metric Baselining Imperative for Requirements Processes. 292 - Nur Yilmaztürk:
RE in Flatness Measurement and Control Systems Development at ABB. 293
Industry Session 4: State of Practice
- Frank J. Salvatore, Tom Alameda:
Daily Challenges in Requirements Engineering. 297 - Taichi Nakamura, Shigeyuki Matsuda:
Practical Lessons from 40 System Integrating Projects. 298 - Gerald Heller, Peter Vollmer:
Requirements Based Testing at HP Open View. 299
Industry Session 5: Testing & Traceability
- Serban Catrava:
Testing with Partial Traced Requirements: A Necessary Step Towards Higher Quality System Level Verification. 303 - George Romanski:
Requirements, Configuration Management and Traceability for Safety Critical Software. 304 - James E. Archer Jr.:
Requirement Tracking: A Streamlined Approach. 305
Mini-Tutorials
- Karin K. Breitman, Julio César Sampaio do Prado Leite:
Ontology as a Requirements Engineering Product. 309-319 - Alistair G. Sutcliffe:
Scenario-Based Requirements Engineering. 320-329 - Georg Herzwurm, Sixten Schockert, Wolfram Pietsch:
QFD for Customer-Focused Requirements Engineering. 330-
Panel Sessions
- Matti Rossi, Tuure Tuunanen:
Marketing Meets Requirements Engineering. 341 - Nancy R. Mead, Nader Kameli:
Requirements Engineering in Practice: Making the Business Case for Requirements Engineering. 342
Posters and Demos Session 1
Demos
- Mats Per Erik Heimdahl, Michael W. Whalen, Jeffrey M. Thompson:
NIMBUS: A Tool for Specification Centered Development. 349 - André Rifaut, Philippe Massonet, Jean-François Molderez, Christophe Ponsard, Pierre Stadnik, Axel van Lamsweerde, Hung Tran Van:
FAUST: Formal Analysis Using Specification Tools. 350 - William H. Stufflebeam, Annie I. Antón, Thomas A. Alspaugh:
SMaRT - Scenario Management and Requirements Tool. 351 - Martin S. Feather, Tim Menzies, Judith R. Connelly:
Relating Practitioner Needs to Research Activities. 352-
Poster Presentations
- Thomas A. Alspaugh, Annie I. Antón:
Contrasting Use Case, Goal, and Scenario Analysis of the Euronet System. 355-356 - Haruhiko Kaiya, Kouta Sasaki, Yasunori Maebashi, Kenji Kaijiri:
Trade-off Analysis between Security Policies for Java Mobile Codes and Requirements for Java Application. 357-358 - Luiz Marcio Cysneiros, André Kushniruk:
Bringing Usability to the Early Stages of Software Development. 359-
Posters and Demos Session 2
Poster Presentations
- Kazuya Oshiro, Kenji Watahiki, Motoshi Saeki:
Goal-Oriented Idea Generation Method for Requirements Elicitation. 363-364 - Tuure Tuunanen, Matti Rossi:
Market Driven Requirements Elicitation via Critical Success Chains. 367-368 - Neil A. M. Maiden, Sara Jones, Mary Flynn:
Integrating RE Methods to Support Use Case Based Requirements Specification. 369-370 - Luncheng Lin, Bashar Nuseibeh, Darrel C. Ince, Michael Jackson, Jonathan D. Moffett:
Introducing Abuse Frames for Analysing Security Requirements. 371-372 - Debbie Richards, Anne-Britt Fure, Oscar Aguilera:
An Approach to Visualise and Reconcile Use Case Descriptions from Multiple Viewpoints. 373-374 - Matthias Jarke, Oliver Fritzen, Michalis Miatidis, Marcus Schlüter:
Media-Assisted Product and Process Requirements Traceability in Supply Chains. 375-376
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.