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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2009

Clarifying Non-Functional Requirements to Improve User Acceptance - Experience at Siemens

Christoph Marhold
  • Fonction : Auteur
Joerg Doerr
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

[Context and motivation] The starting point for software development is usually the system requirements. The requirements, especially nonfunctional requirements specified in a document are often incomplete and inconsistent with the initial user needs and expectations. [Question/problem] Experience at Siemens showed us that programmers working on software development often have trouble interpreting under-specified non-functional requirements, resulting in code that does not meet the users' quality expectations and contains "quality faults" that can only be detected later through expensive user acceptance testing activities. [Principal ideas/results] In this problem statement paper, we investigate the need for clarifying non-functional requirements in software specifications to improve user acceptance. In particular we focus on establishing the role of non-functional requirements on user acceptance. [Contribution] Our contribution is that we emphasize the need for a systematic empirical study in this area. We propose a possible set-up where a number of hypotheses have been developed that a systematic experiment will help to validate. Our work is based on industrial experiments at Siemens, in the particular context of the installation of a Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) system.

Dates et versions

hal-00663311 , version 1 (26-01-2012)

Identifiants

Citer

Christoph Marhold, Clotilde Rohleder, Camille Salinesi, Joerg Doerr. Clarifying Non-Functional Requirements to Improve User Acceptance - Experience at Siemens. REFSQ '09 Proceedings of the 15th International Working Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality, Jun 2009, Amsterdam, Netherlands. pp.139-146, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-02050-6_12⟩. ⟨hal-00663311⟩

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