Supporting Scenario-Based Requirements Engineering
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Problem domain categories in requirements engineering
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Writing Effective Use Cases
Scenarios in System Development: Current Practice
IEEE Software
Experience with SCRAM, a SCenario Requirements Analysis Method
ICRE '98 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Putting Requirements Engineering to Practice
CREWS-SAVRE: Systematic Scenario Generation and Use
ICRE '98 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Putting Requirements Engineering to Practice
Scenario-Driven Search Finds More Exceptions
DEXA '00 Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Database and Expert Systems Applications
Problems and requirements [software development]
RE '95 Proceedings of the Second IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering
Enhancing a Requirements Baseline with Scenarios
RE '97 Proceedings of the 3rd IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering
Software Requirements Specification Database Based on Requirements Frame Model
ICRE '96 Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Requirements Engineering (ICRE '96)
Domain Independent Regularities in Scenarios
RE '01 Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering
Rule-based Verification of Scenarios with Pre-conditions and Post-conditions
RE '05 Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering
A taxonomy for scenario use in requirements elicitation and analysis of software systems
ECBS'99 Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Requirements Engineering Visualization: A Survey on the State-of-the-Art
REV '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Fourth International Workshop on Requirements Engineering Visualization
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A visually classification method of scenarios using differential information between normal scenarios is presented. Behaviors of normal scenarios belonging to the same problem domain are quite similar. We derive the differential information, named differential scenario, from such normal scenarios and apply the differential scenario to classify scenarios. Our method will be illustrated with examples. This paper describes (1) a language for describing scenarios in which simple action traces are embellished to include typed frames based on a simple case grammar of actions, (2) an introduction of the differential scenario, and (3) a method of visualizing scenario classification named Scenario Similarity Map using the differential scenario.