


default search action
RE 1995: York, England
- Second IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, March 27 - 29, 1995, York, England, UK. IEEE Computer Society 1995, ISBN 0-8186-7017-7

- Michael Jackson:

Problems and requirements (software development). 2-9 - Paul A. Gough, Filip T. Fodemski, Stewart A. Higgins, S. J. Ray:

Scenarios-an industrial case study and hypermedia enhancements. 10-17 - Bob Fields, Peter C. Wright, Michael D. Harrison:

A task centered approach to analysing human error tolerance requirements. 18-26 - John A. Hughes, Jon O'Brien, Tom Rodden, Mark Rouncefield, Ian Sommerville:

Presenting ethnography in the requirements process. 27-39 - Björn Regnell, Kristofer Kimbler, Anders Wesslén:

Improving the use case driven approach to requirements engineering. 40-41 - Steve M. Easterbrook, Bashar Nuseibeh:

Managing inconsistencies in an evolving specification. 48-55 - Constance L. Heitmeyer, Bruce G. Labaw, Daniel L. Kiskis:

Consistency checking of SCR-style requirements specifications. 56-65 - Kevin Ryan:

Panel 2: Let's Have More Experimentation in Requirements Engineering. RE 1995: 66-67 - Khaled El Emam, Nazim H. Madhavji:

A field study of requirements engineering practices in information systems development. 68-80 - Patrik Forsgren, Tomas Rahkonen:

Specification of customer and user requirements in industrial control system procurement projects. 81-88 - Balasubramaniam Ramesh, Timothy Powers, Curtis Stubbs, Michael Edwards:

Implementing requirements traceability: a case study. 89-99 - Orlena Gotel, Anthony Finkelstein:

Contribution structures (Requirements artifacts). 100-107 - Julio César Sampaio do Prado Leite

, Antônio de Pádua Albuquerque Oliveira:
A client oriented requirements baseline. 108-115 - I. A. Macfarlane, I. Reilly:

Requirements traceability in an integrated development environment. 116-127 - Colin Potts:

Invented requirements and imagined customers: requirements engineering for off-the-shelf software. 128-131 - Lawrence Chung, Brian A. Nixon, Eric S. K. Yu:

Using non-functional requirements to systematically support change. 132-139 - Stephen Fickas, Martin S. Feather:

Requirements monitoring in dynamic environments. 140-147 - Neil A. M. Maiden, P. Mistry, Alistair G. Sutcliffe:

How People Categorise Requirements for Reuse: a Natural Approach. 148-157 - Joanne M. Atlee, John A. McDermid:

Integrating requirements analysis and safety analysis. 158-159 - Janis A. Bubenko Jr.:

Challenges in requirements engineering. 160-163 - David W. Bustard, P. J. Lundy:

Enhancing soft systems analysis with formal modelling. 164-171 - Colin Potts, Kenji Takahashi, Jeffrey D. Smith, Kenji Ota:

An evaluation of inquiry-based requirements analysis for an Internet service. 172-180 - Jean-Pierre Jacquot, A. Valdenaire:

Trading legibility against implementability in requirement specifications: an experimental assessment. 181-189 - Marina Jirotka, Christian Heath, Paul Luff:

Ethnography by Video for Requirements Capture. 190-193 - Axel van Lamsweerde, Robert Darimont, Philippe Massonet:

Goal-directed elaboration of requirements for a meeting scheduler: problems and lessons learnt. 194-203 - Khaled El Emam, Nazim H. Madhavji:

Measuring the success of requirements engineering processes. 204-213 - Pamela Zave:

Classification of research efforts in requirements engineering. 214-216

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














