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Conference Papers Year : 2012

Requirements Sensemaking Using Concept Maps

Shamal Faily
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  • PersonId : 1008917
John Lyle
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  • PersonId : 1008916
Andrea Atzeni
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  • PersonId : 1011849
Dieter Blomme
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  • PersonId : 1011850
Heiko Desruelle
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  • PersonId : 1008922

Abstract

Requirements play an important role in software engineering, but their perceived usefulness means that they often fail to be properly maintained. Traceability is often considered a means for motivating and maintaining requirements, but this is difficult without a better understanding of the requirements themselves. Sensemaking techniques help us get this understanding, but the representations necessary to support it are difficult to create, and scale poorly when dealing with medium to large scale problems. This paper describes how, with the aid of supporting software tools, concept mapping can be used to both make sense of and improve the quality of a requirements specification. We illustrate this approach by using it to update the requirements specification for the EU webinos project, and discuss several findings arising from our results.
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hal-01556817 , version 1 (05-07-2017)

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Shamal Faily, John Lyle, André Paul, Andrea Atzeni, Dieter Blomme, et al.. Requirements Sensemaking Using Concept Maps. 4th International Conference on Human-Centered Software Engineering (HCSE), Oct 2012, Toulouse, France. pp.217-232, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-34347-6_13⟩. ⟨hal-01556817⟩
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