scholarly journals Integrating Requirements Engineering for Different Domains in System Development – Lessons Learnt from Industrial SME Cases

Procedia CIRP ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 351-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Wiesner ◽  
Sara Nilsson ◽  
Klaus-Dieter Thoben
Author(s):  
M. Mahmudul Hasan

Regulations and policies contain a rich source of requirements and failure to address these authoritative requirements in software system development can impose costly penalties for regulatory noncompliance. Despite the advancement of information system research, regulatory requirements compliance remains one of the primary challenges still to be efficiently dealt in system development because of the scarce information, complexity, and understanding of available approaches in requirements engineering process of a system development. This paper reports a systematic literature review of the documented approaches of regulatory requirements compliance, classifies these approaches according to different criteria and provides a qualitative analysis of their operational characteristics. The results of this analysis can serve system developers as the means of deriving appropriate methods and tools for regulatory requirements compliance in the software system development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 172 ◽  
pp. 110851
Author(s):  
Rashidah Kasauli ◽  
Eric Knauss ◽  
Jennifer Horkoff ◽  
Grischa Liebel ◽  
Francisco Gomes de Oliveira Neto

Author(s):  
Rashidah Kasauli ◽  
Grischa Liebel ◽  
Eric Knauss ◽  
Swathi Gopakumar ◽  
Benjamin Kanagwa

2010 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-61
Author(s):  
Igor Novakovic ◽  
Velimir Deletic ◽  
Milan Deletic

This paper presents how functionality of certain CASE tools can be extended in order to facilitate requirements engineering. It describes the technique for information flows analysis, which can be used in conceptual modeling and further development of the system. .


Author(s):  
Fernando Flores ◽  
Manuel Mora ◽  
Francisco Alvarez ◽  
Rory O’Connor ◽  
Jorge Macias-Luevano

Requirements engineering is the process of discovering the purpose and implicit needs of a software system that will be developed and making explicit, complete, and non ambiguous their specification. Its relevance is based in that omission or mistakes generated during this phase and corrected in later phases of a system development lifecycle, will cause cost overruns and delays to the project, as well as incomplete software. This chapter, by using a conceptual research approach, reviews the literature for developing a review of types of requirements, and the processes, activities, and techniques used. Analysis and synthesis of such findings permit to posit a generic requirements engineering process. Implications, trends, and challenges are then reported. While its execution is being mandatory in most SDLCs, it is done partially. Furthermore, the emergence of advanced services-oriented technologies suggests further research for identifying what of the present knowledge is useful and what is needed. This research is an initial effort to synthesize accumulated knowledge.


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