On Context Modelling in Systems and Applications Development
Proceedings of the 2011 conference on Information Modelling and Knowledge Bases XXII
Effective requirements elicitation in product line application engineering: an experiment
REFSQ'13 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality
BCS-HCI '13 Proceedings of the 27th International BCS Human Computer Interaction Conference
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Early orientation towards tasks of the application domain to be supported by a software system has been proposed as a fruitful means for achieving more appropriate and usable systems as well as for focusing the requirements engineering process. Besides goal orientation, task orientation has therefore been recognized as a promising concept for assuringmore completeness and correctness of requirements specifications, and better integration with usability engineering issues. In this paper, we present experiences made with the task-oriented requirements engineering framework “TORE” in four different case studies. These case studies were selected based on their contextual specifics, like service orientation or ambient intelligence, that might impose certain challenges on task-oriented RE. As a lesson learned, we experienced TORE to be highly beneficial even in systems that do not seem to be “traditional” information systems at first glance. However, we also identified limitations that call for necessary adaptations.