WordNet: a lexical database for English
Communications of the ACM
The use of object-oriented models in requirements engineering: a field study
ICIS '99 Proceedings of the 20th international conference on Information Systems
Automatic labeling of semantic roles
Computational Linguistics
CM-Builder: An Automated NL-Based CASE Tool
ASE '00 Proceedings of the 15th IEEE international conference on Automated software engineering
Market research for requirements analysis using linguistic tools
Requirements Engineering
Research Directions in Requirements Engineering
FOSE '07 2007 Future of Software Engineering
Thematic Role Based Generation of UML Models from Real World Requirements
ICSC '07 Proceedings of the International Conference on Semantic Computing
Conceptual Model Generation from Requirements Model: A Natural Language Processing Approach
NLDB '08 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Natural Language and Information Systems: Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems
The Stanford typed dependencies representation
CrossParser '08 Coling 2008: Proceedings of the workshop on Cross-Framework and Cross-Domain Parser Evaluation
Extracting conceptual graphs from Japanese documents for software requirements modeling
APCCM '09 Proceedings of the Sixth Asia-Pacific Conference on Conceptual Modeling - Volume 96
Natural language processing: mature enough for requirements documents analysis?
NLDB'05 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Natural Language Processing and Information Systems
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This paper proposes an approach which utilizes natural language processing (NLP) and ontology knowledge to automatically denote the implicit semantics of textual requirements. Requirements documents include the syntax of natural language but not the semantics. Semantics are usually interpreted by the human user. In earlier work Gelhausen and Tichy showed that Sale mx automatically creates UML domain models from (semantically) annotated textual specifications [1]. This manual annotation process is very time consuming and can only be carried out by annotation experts. We automate semantic annotation so that Sale mx can be completely automated. With our approach, the analyst receives the domain model of a requirements specification in a very fast and easy manner. Using these concepts is the first step into farther automation of requirements engineering and software development.