Author :
Hsia, P. ; Davis, Alan ; Kung, David
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., & Eng., Texas Univ., Arlington, TX, USA
Abstract :
It is argued that, in general, requirements engineering produces one large document, written in a natural language, that few people bother to read. Projects that do read and follow the document often build systems that do not satisfy needs. The reasons for the current state of the practice are listed. Research areas that have significant payoff potential, including improving natural-language specifications, rapid prototyping and requirements animation, requirements clustering, requirements-based testing, computer-aided requirements engineering, requirements reuse, research into methods, knowledge engineering, formal methods, and a unified framework, are outlined.<>
Keywords :
formal specification; software engineering; software prototyping; computer-aided requirements engineering; formal methods; knowledge engineering; natural language; natural-language specifications; rapid prototyping; requirements animation; requirements clustering; requirements engineering; requirements reuse; requirements-based testing; research; Application software; Computer aided software engineering; Engineering management; Hardware; Silver; Software testing; Tires; Visualization;