Research Directions in Requirements Engineering
FOSE '07 2007 Future of Software Engineering
Enhancing Elicitation Technique Selection Process in a Cooperative Distributed Environment
REFSQ '08 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality
How to choose groupware tools considering stakeholders' preferences during requirements elicitation?
CRIWG'07 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Groupware: design implementation, and use
Teaching Requirements Engineering to the Baháí Students in Iran who are Denied of Higher Education
REET '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Fourth International Workshop on Requirements Engineering Education and Training
Challenges and improvements in distributed software development: a systematic review
Advances in Software Engineering
A cognitive perspective for choosing groupware tools and elicitation techniques in virtual teams
ICCSA'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on Computational Science and its Applications - Volume Part I
Domain requirements elicitation and analysis - an ontology-based approach
ICCS'06 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computational Science - Volume Part IV
A systematic literature review of stakeholder identification methods in requirements elicitation
Journal of Systems and Software
Empirical Software Engineering
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Software development teams are often geographically distributed from their customers and end users. This creates significant communication and coordination challenges that impact the effectiveness of requirements engineering. Travel costs, and the local availability of quality technical staff increase the demand for effective distributed software development teams.This research reports an empirical study of how groupware can be used to aid distributed requirements engineering for a software development project. Six groups of seven to nine members were formed and divided into separate remote groups of customers and engineers. The engineers conducted a requirements analysis and produced a software requirements specification (SRS) document through distributed interaction with the remote customers.We present results and conclusions from the research including: an analysis of factors that effected the quality of the Software Requirements Specification document written at the conclusion of the requirements process and the effectiveness of requirements elicitation techniques which were used in a distributed setting for requirements gathering.