Title :
Guiding use case authoring: results of an empirical study
Author :
Achour, C.B. ; Rolland, C. ; Maiden, N.A.M. ; Souveyet, C.
Author_Institution :
Centre de Recherche en Inf., Paris I Univ., Paris, France
Abstract :
This paper presents results from the first of two empirical studies which examine the effectiveness of guidelines for use case authoring. The ESPRIT 21.903 CREWS long-term research project has developed style and content guidelines for authoring use cases for requirements acquisition and validation. The effectiveness of these guidelines has been evaluated under different conditions. Results indicate that: the authoring guidelines improve the overall quality of the use case prose; the different guidelines work differently and with different levels of efficiency; and use cases are never entirely correctly written; thus, they can be systematically corrected. The paper details a qualitative and quantitative comparison between guided and non-guided use case authoring. It outlines lessons learned and implications for the CREWS software tools design
Keywords :
research initiatives; software tools; systems analysis; CREWS research project; ESPRIT; requirements acquisition; requirements validation; software tool design; use case authoring; Computer aided software engineering; Electronic switching systems; Guidelines; Human computer interaction; Independent component analysis; Marine vehicles; Natural languages; Read only memory; Software tools; Unified modeling language;
Conference_Titel :
Requirements Engineering, 1999. Proceedings. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Limerick
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0188-5
DOI :
10.1109/ISRE.1999.777983