%0 Conference Proceedings %T Combining Goal-Oriented and Problem-Oriented Requirements Engineering Methods %+ PALUNO - The Ruhr Institute for Software Technology (PALUNO) %+ Department of Information Engineering and Computer Science (DISI) %A Beckers, Kristian %A Fassbender, Stephan %A Heisel, Maritta %A Paci, Federica %Z Part 1: Cross-Domain Conference and Workshop on Multidisciplinary Research and Practice for Information Systems (CD-ARES 2013) %< avec comité de lecture %( Lecture Notes in Computer Science %B 1st Cross-Domain Conference and Workshop on Availability, Reliability, and Security in Information Systems (CD-ARES) %C Regensburg, Germany %Y Alfredo Cuzzocrea %Y Christian Kittl %Y Dimitris E. Simos %Y Edgar Weippl %Y Lida Xu %I Springer %3 Availability, Reliability, and Security in Information Systems and HCI %V LNCS-8127 %P 178-194 %8 2013-09-02 %D 2013 %K requirements engineering %K SI* %K Problem Frames %Z Computer Science [cs] %Z Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesConference papers %X Several requirements engineering methods exist that differ in their abstraction level and in their view on the system-to-be. Two fundamentally different classes of requirements engineering methods are goal- and problem-based methods. Goal-based methods analyze the goals of stakeholders towards the system-to-be. Problem-based methods focus on decomposing the development problem into simple sub-problems. Goal-based methods use a higher abstraction level that consider only the parts of a system that are relevant for a goal and provide the means to analyze and solve goal conflicts. Problem-based methods use a lower abstraction level that describes the entire system-to-be. A combination of these methods enables a seamless software development, which considers stakeholders’ goals and a comprehensive view on the system-to-be at the requirements level. We propose a requirements engineering method that combines the goal-based method SI* and the problem-based method Problem Frames. We propose to analyze the issues between different goals of stakeholders first using the SI* method. Our method provides the means to use the resulting SI* models as input for the problem frame method. These Problem Frame models can be refined into architectures using existing research. Thus, we provide a combined requirements engineering method that considers all stakeholder views and provides a detailed system specification. We illustrate our method using an E-Health example. %G English %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01506766/document %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01506766/file/978-3-642-40511-2_13_Chapter.pdf %L hal-01506766 %U https://inria.hal.science/hal-01506766 %~ SHS %~ IFIP-LNCS %~ IFIP %~ IFIP-TC %~ IFIP-TC5 %~ IFIP-WG %~ IFIP-TC8 %~ IFIP-CD-ARES %~ IFIP-WG8-4 %~ IFIP-WG8-9 %~ IFIP-LNCS-8127