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RE 1995: York, England
- Second IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, March 27 - 29, 1995, York, England, UK. IEEE Computer Society 1995, ISBN 0-8186-7017-7
- Michael Jackson:
Problems and requirements (software development). 2-9 - Paul A. Gough, Filip T. Fodemski, Stewart A. Higgins, S. J. Ray:
Scenarios-an industrial case study and hypermedia enhancements. 10-17 - Bob Fields, Peter C. Wright, Michael D. Harrison:
A task centered approach to analysing human error tolerance requirements. 18-26 - John A. Hughes, Jon O'Brien, Tom Rodden, Mark Rouncefield, Ian Sommerville:
Presenting ethnography in the requirements process. 27-39 - Björn Regnell, Kristofer Kimbler, Anders Wesslén:
Improving the use case driven approach to requirements engineering. 40-41 - Steve M. Easterbrook, Bashar Nuseibeh:
Managing inconsistencies in an evolving specification. 48-55 - Constance L. Heitmeyer, Bruce G. Labaw, Daniel L. Kiskis:
Consistency checking of SCR-style requirements specifications. 56-65 - Kevin Ryan:
Panel 2: Let's Have More Experimentation in Requirements Engineering. RE 1995: 66-67 - Khaled El Emam, Nazim H. Madhavji:
A field study of requirements engineering practices in information systems development. 68-80 - Patrik Forsgren, Tomas Rahkonen:
Specification of customer and user requirements in industrial control system procurement projects. 81-88 - Balasubramaniam Ramesh, Timothy Powers, Curtis Stubbs, Michael Edwards:
Implementing requirements traceability: a case study. 89-99 - Orlena Gotel, Anthony Finkelstein:
Contribution structures (Requirements artifacts). 100-107 - Julio César Sampaio do Prado Leite, Antônio de Pádua Albuquerque Oliveira:
A client oriented requirements baseline. 108-115 - I. A. Macfarlane, I. Reilly:
Requirements traceability in an integrated development environment. 116-127 - Colin Potts:
Invented requirements and imagined customers: requirements engineering for off-the-shelf software. 128-131 - Lawrence Chung, Brian A. Nixon, Eric S. K. Yu:
Using non-functional requirements to systematically support change. 132-139 - Stephen Fickas, Martin S. Feather:
Requirements monitoring in dynamic environments. 140-147 - Neil A. M. Maiden, P. Mistry, Alistair G. Sutcliffe:
How People Categorise Requirements for Reuse: a Natural Approach. 148-157 - Joanne M. Atlee, John A. McDermid:
Integrating requirements analysis and safety analysis. 158-159 - Janis A. Bubenko Jr.:
Challenges in requirements engineering. 160-163 - David W. Bustard, P. J. Lundy:
Enhancing soft systems analysis with formal modelling. 164-171 - Colin Potts, Kenji Takahashi, Jeffrey D. Smith, Kenji Ota:
An evaluation of inquiry-based requirements analysis for an Internet service. 172-180 - Jean-Pierre Jacquot, A. Valdenaire:
Trading legibility against implementability in requirement specifications: an experimental assessment. 181-189 - Marina Jirotka, Christian Heath, Paul Luff:
Ethnography by Video for Requirements Capture. 190-193 - Axel van Lamsweerde, Robert Darimont, Philippe Massonet:
Goal-directed elaboration of requirements for a meeting scheduler: problems and lessons learnt. 194-203 - Khaled El Emam, Nazim H. Madhavji:
Measuring the success of requirements engineering processes. 204-213 - Pamela Zave:
Classification of research efforts in requirements engineering. 214-216
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