Getting computers to talk like you and me
Getting computers to talk like you and me
Attention, intentions, and the structure of discourse
Computational Linguistics
International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
Goal-directed requirements acquisition
6IWSSD Selected Papers of the Sixth International Workshop on Software Specification and Design
Formal Approach to Scenario Analysis
IEEE Software
Understanding Quality in Conceptual Modeling
IEEE Software
Fast, Cheap Requirements: Prototype, or Else!
IEEE Software
An approach for defining ways-of-working
Information Systems - Special issue: advanced information systems engineering
COLLAGEN: when agents collaborate with people
AGENTS '97 Proceedings of the first international conference on Autonomous agents
CAiSe '95 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering
Natural Language Engineering
Requirements validation via automated natural language parsing
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special section: Information technology and its organizational impact
User-system dialogues and the notion of focus
The Knowledge Engineering Review
Journal of Integrated Design & Process Science
Asking the right questions to elicit product requirements
International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing - THE CHALLENGES OF MANUFACTURING IN THE GLOBALLY INTEGRATED ECONOMY. GUEST EDITOR: ROBIN G. QIU
A proposal of a method to navigate interview-driven software requirements elicitation work
WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications
Dialogue systems for virtual environments
YIWCALA '10 Proceedings of the NAACL HLT 2010 Young Investigators Workshop on Computational Approaches to Languages of the Americas
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In this paper we present our work on requirements elicitation. The elicitation process is a complex task which necessitates computer support. Elicitation systems should ideally help their users check the correctness of the specifications obtained but also actively guide them in the acquisition of the requirements. We consider hereafter systems that communicate in natural language. We describe a framework that tries to improve the quality of the guidance it provides to its users by taking into account natural language constraints. We discuss the need for a theory of natural language dialogue structure, and we show how we have integrated such a theory within an early prototype of an elicitation system.