Software quality trade-offs: A systematic map
Information and Software Technology
Software architects' experiences of quality requirements: what we know and what we do not know?
REFSQ'13 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality
Mapping study about usability requirements elicitation
CAiSE'13 Proceedings of the 25th international conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering
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It is commonly acknowledged that the management of quality requirements is an important and difficult part of the requirements engineering process, which plays a critical role in software product development. In order to identify current research about quality requirements, a systematic literature review was performed. This paper identifies available empirical studies of quality requirements. A database and manual search identified 1,560 studies, of which 18 were found to be empirical research studies of high quality, and relevant to the research questions. The review investigates what is currently known about the benefits and limitations of methods of quality requirements. In addition, the state of research is presented for five identified areas: elicitation, dependencies, quality requirements metrics, cost estimations, and prioritization.