DocumentCode
2260908
Title
A Study on the Importance of Order in Requirements Prioritisation
Author
Svahnberg, Mikael ; Karasira, Aimable
Author_Institution
Blekinge Inst. of Technol., Ronneby, Sweden
fYear
2009
fDate
1-1 Sept. 2009
Firstpage
35
Lastpage
41
Abstract
A key principle when performing research studies is that of randomisation, in order to counter any effects that the ordering of tasks, elements, subjects, etc. may have on the dependent variables. When performing requirements prioritisation, it is not always possible (e.g., because of how prioritisation methods are constructed) or even desirable to randomise all requirements before prioritising them. It is thus important to know the effect that the initial order of the requirements will have on their final priorities, and this is studied in this article. The results indicate that the initial order of elements does not significantly influence the resulting priorities of the most and least important requirements, but that it does indeed influence the results when looking at all of the requirements.
Keywords
formal verification; software process improvement; market-driven software product development; requirement engineering; requirements prioritisation; Control systems; Counting circuits; History; Job production systems; Logistics; Product development; Voting;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Product Management (IWSPM), 2009 Third International Workshop on
Conference_Location
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-7693-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IWSPM.2009.1
Filename
5457322
Link To Document