• DocumentCode
    2151221
  • Title

    Goal reasoning for quality elicitation in the ISOA approach

  • Author

    Slimane, Assia Ait Ali ; Pinheiro, Manuele Kirsch ; Souveyet, Carine

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. Paris 1 Pantheon, Paris
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    22-24 April 2009
  • Firstpage
    39
  • Lastpage
    48
  • Abstract
    Services based applications are considered as support for both business-to-consumer interactions and business-to-business collaborations. However, service oriented computing (SOC) remains at the software level and business people cannot exploit fully its benefits. In this context, the intentional service oriented architecture (ISOA) suggests a move from the function-driven service oriented computing (SOC) to intention-driven SOC in order to provide service description understandable by business practitioners. Intentional services represented business oriented services in an intentional perspective, i.e. focusing on the goal it allows achieving rather on the functionality it performs. However, current intentional service omits the quality of service (QoS) dimension. In this paper, we focus on the quality elicitation process to apply for (1) capturing customers´ quality requirements and (2) describing the quality of service on an intentional service specification. We consider that the elicitation of the quality of a service during the requirements engineering (RE) phase can contribute to a customer-centered adaptability of service composition by selecting the service composition that will satisfy customers´ quality requirements. The aim is to provide a goal driven approach to reason on quality for both documenting intentional service and discovering the quality requirements of business customers.
  • Keywords
    Web services; business data processing; customer satisfaction; formal specification; formal verification; quality of service; software architecture; software quality; systems analysis; ISOA approach; QoS; Web-service; business-to-business collaboration; business-to-consumer interaction; customer quality requirement; customer satisfaction; goal reasoning; intentional service oriented architecture; intentional service specification; quality elicitation process; quality-of-service; requirement engineering; service oriented computing; Application software; Collaboration; Context-aware services; Design engineering; Information security; Monitoring; Proposals; Quality of service; Service oriented architecture; Software systems; Service-oriented computing; customer-centred adaptability; intentional service; intentional service-oriented architecture; quality of service;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Research Challenges in Information Science, 2009. RCIS 2009. Third International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Fez
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2864-9
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2865-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/RCIS.2009.5089266
  • Filename
    5089266