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Niques) for Facilitating Requirements Capture Contents Introduction 1. the Need for High Quality Requirements Engineering 2. What Is Requirements Engineering? 2.1 Requirements Acquisition 2.2 Requirements Analysis 2.3 Requirements Speciication Construction 2.4 Requirements Validation 2.5 Requirement
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Green, Stewart |
| Abstract | A survey of the literature on requirements engineering was undertaken for two reasons: rst, to deene the term requirements engineering, and second, to identify diierent approaches which have been taken to the capture of application requirements. The literature indicated that requirements engineering is an iterative process comprising the following phases: requirements acquisition, requirements analysis, requirements speci-cation construction, requirements validation, and requirements use. The main goal of the process is to capture that set of requirements which, if implemented, would produce an application perfectly satisfying the customer. It was possible to divide the diierent approaches taken to requirements capture into two groups. In one group a number of recent approaches made explicit use of previously captured application domain knowledge to facilitate the capture of requirements. The other group included both traditional and user-centred approaches as well as approaches based on formal speciication and prototyping. It is recommended that the development of a computer-based expert systems analyst be investigated. Such a system would model on a computer the way real systems analysts use a combination of general skills and domain speciic knowledge to aid the capture of requirements. It is predicted that such a system would improve the eeciency with which requirements are captured. |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | http://www.soi.city.ac.uk/homes/till/wp31.ps |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |