Operationalizing the requirements selection process with study selection procedures from systematic literature reviews
(2015) 6th Workshop on Requirements Prioritization and Communication (RePriCo) co-located with the 21st International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality, REFSQ 2015 In CEUR Workshop Proceedings 1342. p.102-113- Abstract
Context: Software organizations working in a market-driven environment have to select requirements from a large pool to be prioritized and put into backlogs for the development organization. Objective: This paper proposes an approach based on study selection in systematic literature reviews and translates the concept to requirements engineering. The rational for doing so is that the selection processes used there have been e?ective (selecting and finding relevant papers) and efficient (possible to use for a high number of studies, in some cases 10,000 research contributions had to be evaluated). Method: This paper can be classified as a solution proposal, and utilizes hypothetical examples to explain and argue for the method design... (More)
Context: Software organizations working in a market-driven environment have to select requirements from a large pool to be prioritized and put into backlogs for the development organization. Objective: This paper proposes an approach based on study selection in systematic literature reviews and translates the concept to requirements engineering. The rational for doing so is that the selection processes used there have been e?ective (selecting and finding relevant papers) and efficient (possible to use for a high number of studies, in some cases 10,000 research contributions had to be evaluated). Method: This paper can be classified as a solution proposal, and utilizes hypothetical examples to explain and argue for the method design decisions. Results: The process proposed consists of three main phases, namely establish selection criteria, evaluate selection criteria, and apply selection. On a more fine-grained level, nine activities are specified. Conclusion: Given that the process has been e?ective and efficient in a similar context, our proposition to be evaluated in future research contributions is that the process leads to e?ective and efficient decision making in requirements selection.
(Less)
- author
- Petersen, Kai and Ali, Nauman Bin
- publishing date
- 2015-01-01
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Inclusion and exclusion criteria, Requirements selection, Study selection
- host publication
- REFSQ-JP 2015 REFSQ Workshops, Research Method Track, and Poster Track : Joint Proceedings of REFSQ-2015 Workshops, Research Method Track, and Poster Track co-located with the 21st International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality (REFSQ 2015) - Joint Proceedings of REFSQ-2015 Workshops, Research Method Track, and Poster Track co-located with the 21st International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality (REFSQ 2015)
- series title
- CEUR Workshop Proceedings
- volume
- 1342
- pages
- 12 pages
- publisher
- CEUR-WS
- conference name
- 6th Workshop on Requirements Prioritization and Communication (RePriCo) co-located with the 21st International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality, REFSQ 2015
- conference location
- Essen, Germany
- conference dates
- 2015-03-23 - 2015-03-23
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:84925937294
- ISSN
- 1613-0073
- project
- Embedded Applications Software Engineering
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 42e2baf8-c923-4235-8f21-2be9b8708b22
- alternative location
- http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1342/01-reprico.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2018-09-27 14:12:51
- date last changed
- 2024-04-15 12:13:47
@inproceedings{42e2baf8-c923-4235-8f21-2be9b8708b22, abstract = {{<p>Context: Software organizations working in a market-driven environment have to select requirements from a large pool to be prioritized and put into backlogs for the development organization. Objective: This paper proposes an approach based on study selection in systematic literature reviews and translates the concept to requirements engineering. The rational for doing so is that the selection processes used there have been e?ective (selecting and finding relevant papers) and efficient (possible to use for a high number of studies, in some cases 10,000 research contributions had to be evaluated). Method: This paper can be classified as a solution proposal, and utilizes hypothetical examples to explain and argue for the method design decisions. Results: The process proposed consists of three main phases, namely establish selection criteria, evaluate selection criteria, and apply selection. On a more fine-grained level, nine activities are specified. Conclusion: Given that the process has been e?ective and efficient in a similar context, our proposition to be evaluated in future research contributions is that the process leads to e?ective and efficient decision making in requirements selection.</p>}}, author = {{Petersen, Kai and Ali, Nauman Bin}}, booktitle = {{REFSQ-JP 2015 REFSQ Workshops, Research Method Track, and Poster Track : Joint Proceedings of REFSQ-2015 Workshops, Research Method Track, and Poster Track co-located with the 21st International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality (REFSQ 2015)}}, issn = {{1613-0073}}, keywords = {{Inclusion and exclusion criteria; Requirements selection; Study selection}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{01}}, pages = {{102--113}}, publisher = {{CEUR-WS}}, series = {{CEUR Workshop Proceedings}}, title = {{Operationalizing the requirements selection process with study selection procedures from systematic literature reviews}}, url = {{http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1342/01-reprico.pdf}}, volume = {{1342}}, year = {{2015}}, }