6,225 research outputs found
On Evidence-based Risk Management in Requirements Engineering
Background: The sensitivity of Requirements Engineering (RE) to the context
makes it difficult to efficiently control problems therein, thus, hampering an
effective risk management devoted to allow for early corrective or even
preventive measures. Problem: There is still little empirical knowledge about
context-specific RE phenomena which would be necessary for an effective
context- sensitive risk management in RE. Goal: We propose and validate an
evidence-based approach to assess risks in RE using cross-company data about
problems, causes and effects. Research Method: We use survey data from 228
companies and build a probabilistic network that supports the forecast of
context-specific RE phenomena. We implement this approach using spreadsheets to
support a light-weight risk assessment. Results: Our results from an initial
validation in 6 companies strengthen our confidence that the approach increases
the awareness for individual risk factors in RE, and the feedback further
allows for disseminating our approach into practice.Comment: 20 pages, submitted to 10th Software Quality Days conference, 201
A Case Study on Artefact-based RE Improvement in Practice
Most requirements engineering (RE) process improvement approaches are
solution-driven and activity-based. They focus on the assessment of the RE of a
company against an external norm of best practices. A consequence is that
practitioners often have to rely on an improvement approach that skips a
profound problem analysis and that results in an RE approach that might be
alien to the organisational needs. In recent years, we have developed an RE
improvement approach (called \emph{ArtREPI}) that guides a holistic RE
improvement against individual goals of a company putting primary attention to
the quality of the artefacts. In this paper, we aim at exploring ArtREPI's
benefits and limitations. We contribute an industrial evaluation of ArtREPI by
relying on a case study research. Our results suggest that ArtREPI is
well-suited for the establishment of an RE that reflects a specific
organisational culture but to some extent at the cost of efficiency resulting
from intensive discussions on a terminology that suits all involved
stakeholders. Our results reveal first benefits and limitations, but we can
also conclude the need of longitudinal and independent investigations for which
we herewith lay the foundation
Qualitative Analysis of Causal Cosmological Models
The Einstein's field equations of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universes filled
with a dissipative fluid described by both the {\em truncated} and {\em
non-truncated} causal transport equations are analyzed using techniques from
dynamical systems theory. The equations of state, as well as the phase space,
are different from those used in the recent literature. In the de Sitter
expansion both the hydrodynamic approximation and the non-thermalizing
condition can be fulfilled simultaneously. For these expansions
turn out to be stable provided a certain parameter of the fluid is lower than
1/2. The more general case is studied in detail as well.Comment: RevTeX file, 23 pages. Accepted for publication in J. Math. Phy
Case Studies in Industry: What We Have Learnt
Case study research has become an important research methodology for
exploring phenomena in their natural contexts. Case studies have earned a
distinct role in the empirical analysis of software engineering phenomena which
are difficult to capture in isolation. Such phenomena often appear in the
context of methods and development processes for which it is difficult to run
large, controlled experiments as they usually have to reduce the scale in
several respects and, hence, are detached from the reality of industrial
software development. The other side of the medal is that the realistic
socio-economic environments where we conduct case studies -- with real-life
cases and realistic conditions -- also pose a plethora of practical challenges
to planning and conducting case studies. In this experience report, we discuss
such practical challenges and the lessons we learnt in conducting case studies
in industry. Our goal is to help especially inexperienced researchers facing
their first case studies in industry by increasing their awareness for typical
obstacles they might face and practical ways to deal with those obstacles.Comment: Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Conducting Empirical
Studies in Industry, co-located with ICSE, 201
Preventing Incomplete/Hidden Requirements: Reflections on Survey Data from Austria and Brazil
Many software projects fail due to problems in requirements engineering (RE).
The goal of this paper is analyzing a specific and relevant RE problem in
detail: incomplete/hidden requirements. We replicated a global family of RE
surveys with representatives of software organizations in Austria and Brazil.
We used the data to (a) characterize the criticality of the selected RE
problem, and to (b) analyze the reported main causes and mitigation actions.
Based on the analysis, we discuss how to prevent the problem. The survey
includes 14 different organizations in Austria and 74 in Brazil, including
small, medium and large sized companies, conducting both, plan-driven and agile
development processes. Respondents from both countries cited the
incomplete/hidden requirements problem as one of the most critical RE problems.
We identified and graphically represented the main causes and documented
solution options to address these causes. Further, we compiled a list of
reported mitigation actions. From a practical point of view, this paper
provides further insights into common causes of incomplete/hidden requirements
and on how to prevent this problem.Comment: in Proceedings of the Software Quality Days, 201
Naming the Pain in Requirements Engineering: A Design for a Global Family of Surveys and First Results from Germany
For many years, we have observed industry struggling in defining a high
quality requirements engineering (RE) and researchers trying to understand
industrial expectations and problems. Although we are investigating the
discipline with a plethora of empirical studies, they still do not allow for
empirical generalisations. To lay an empirical and externally valid foundation
about the state of the practice in RE, we aim at a series of open and
reproducible surveys that allow us to steer future research in a problem-driven
manner. We designed a globally distributed family of surveys in joint
collaborations with different researchers and completed the first run in
Germany. The instrument is based on a theory in the form of a set of hypotheses
inferred from our experiences and available studies. We test each hypothesis in
our theory and identify further candidates to extend the theory by correlation
and Grounded Theory analysis. In this article, we report on the design of the
family of surveys, its underlying theory, and the full results obtained from
Germany with participants from 58 companies. The results reveal, for example, a
tendency to improve RE via internally defined qualitative methods rather than
relying on normative approaches like CMMI. We also discovered various RE
problems that are statistically significant in practice. For instance, we could
corroborate communication flaws or moving targets as problems in practice. Our
results are not yet fully representative but already give first insights into
current practices and problems in RE, and they allow us to draw lessons learnt
for future replications. Our results obtained from this first run in Germany
make us confident that the survey design and instrument are well-suited to be
replicated and, thereby, to create a generalisable empirical basis of RE in
practice
Towards Guidelines for Preventing Critical Requirements Engineering Problems
Context] Problems in Requirements Engineering (RE) can lead to serious
consequences during the software development lifecycle. [Goal] The goal of this
paper is to propose empirically-based guidelines that can be used by different
types of organisations according to their size (small, medium or large) and
process model (agile or plan-driven) to help them in preventing such problems.
[Method] We analysed data from a survey on RE problems answered by 228
organisations in 10 different countries. [Results] We identified the most
critical RE problems, their causes and mitigation actions, organizing this
information by clusters of size and process model. Finally, we analysed the
causes and mitigation actions of the critical problems of each cluster to get
further insights into how to prevent them. [Conclusions] Based on our results,
we suggest preliminary guidelines for preventing critical RE problems in
response to context characteristics of the companies.Comment: Proceedings of the 42th Euromicro Conference on Software Engineering
and Advanced Applications, 201
Relation between spectral changes and the presence of the lower kHz QPO in the neutron-star low-mass X-ray binary 4U 1636-53
We fitted the -keV spectrum of all the observations of the
neutron-star low-mass X-ray binary 4U 163653 taken with the {\it Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer} using a model that includes a thermal Comptonisation
component. We found that in the low-hard state the power-law index of this
component, , gradually increases as the source moves in the
colour-colour diagram. When the source undergoes a transition from the hard to
the soft state drops abruptly; once the source is in the soft state
increases again and then decreases gradually as the source spectrum
softens further. The changes in , together with changes of the electron
temperature, reflect changes of the optical depth in the corona. The lower
kilohertz quasi-periodic oscillation (kHz QPO) in this source appears only in
observations during the transition from the hard to the soft state, when the
optical depth of the corona is high and changes depends strongly upon the
position of the source in the colour-colour diagram. Our results are consistent
with a scenario in which the lower kHz QPO reflects a global mode in the system
that results from the resonance between, the disc and/or the neutron-star
surface, and the Comptonising corona.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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