Title of article
Requirements triage: what can we learn from a "medical" approach?
Author/Authors
E.، Simmons, نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-85
From page
86
To page
0
Abstract
New-product development is commonly risky, judging by the number of high-profile failures that continue to occur-especially in software engineering. We can trace many of these failures back to requirements-related issues. Triage is a technique that the medical profession uses to prioritize treatment to patients on the basis of their symptomsʹ severity. Trauma triage provides some tantalizing insights into how we might measure risk of failure early, quickly, and accurately. For projects at significant risk, we could activate a "requirements trauma system" to include specialists, processes, and tools designed to correct the issues and improve the probability that the project ends successfully. We explain these techniques and suggest how we can adapt them to help identify and quantify requirements-related risks.
Keywords
Training challenges , Evidence-based interventions , Training , Exposure to interventions , School psychology
Journal title
IEEE SOFTWARE
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
IEEE SOFTWARE
Record number
103613
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