RE 2005:
Paris, France
13th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering (RE 2005), 29 August - 2 September 2005, Paris, France.
IEEE Computer Society 2005, ISBN 0-7695-2425-7
Cover
Introduction
- Message from the Chairs.

- Conference Committee.

- RE 2006.

Keynotes
- Daniel Jackson:
Dependable Software: An Oxymoron&.
3

- Jean-Pierre Corniou:
The Role of Information Systems within Corporate Strategy and Management Policies: New Challenges.
4

- Suzanne Robertson:
Exemplars for Better Requirements - Tales from the Trenches.
5

Paper Session:
Personalized Software
Paper Session:
Product Lines
Paper Session:
Aligning Requirements with Business Goals
Paper Session:
Elicitation
Paper Session:
Requirements Management
Paper Session:
Policy-Oriented Requirements
Paper Session:
Modelling
- Davor Svetinovic, Daniel M. Berry, Michael W. Godfrey:
Concept Identification in Object-Oriented Domain Analysis: Why Some Students Just Don't Get It.
189-198

- Steve M. Easterbrook, Eric S. K. Yu, Jorge Aranda, Yuntian Fan, Jennifer Horkoff, Marcel Leica, Rifat Abdul Qadir:
Do Viewpoints Lead to Better Conceptual Models? An Exploratory Case Study.
199-208

- Isabel Díaz, Oscar Pastor, Alfredo Matteo:
Modeling Interactions using Role-Driven Patterns.
209-220

Paper Session:
Domain-Specific Requirements Engineering
Paper Session:
Requirements Analysis
Paper Session:
Prioritizing and Merging Requirements
Paper Session:
Constrained Natural-Language Notations
Paper Session:
Goals and Non-Functional Requirements
- Gil Regev, Alain Wegmann:
Where do Goals Come from: the Underlying Principles of Goal-Oriented Requirements Engineering.
353-362

- Yijun Yu, Yiqiao Wang, John Mylopoulos, Sotirios Liaskos, Alexei Lapouchnian, Julio Cesar Sampaio do Prado Leite:
Reverse Engineering Goal Models from Legacy Code.
363-372

- Jörg Dörr, Daniel Kerkow, Tom Koenig, Thomas Olsson, Takeshi Suzuki:
Non-Functional Requirements in Industry - Three Case Studies Adopting an Experience-based NFR Method.
373-384

Practitioner Track:
Quality Improvement
Practitioner Track:
Invited Talks on Industry Experience
- Erik Simmons:
The Usage Model: A Structure for Richly Describing Product Usage during Design and Development.
403-410

Practitioner Track:
Processes and Models
- Ian F. Alexander, Suzanne Robertson, Neil A. M. Maiden:
What Influences the Requirements Process in Industry? A Report on Industrial Practice.
411-415

- Xiping Song, Gilberto Matos, Beatrice Hwong, Arnold Rudorfer, Christopher Nelson:
S-RaP: A Concurrent Prototyping Process for Refining Workflow-Oriented Requirements.
416-420

- Helge Grenager Solheim, Frank M. Lillehagen, Sobah Abbas Petersen, Håvard D. Jørgensen, Maria Anastasiou:
Model-Driven Visual Requirements Engineering.
421-428

Practitioner Track:
Case Studies and Lessons Learned
Panels
- Daniel M. Berry, Daniela Damian, Anthony Finkelstein, Donald C. Gause, Robert Hall, Alan Wassyng:
To do or not to do: If the requirements engineering payoff is so good, why aren't more companies doing it?
447

- Gauthier Fanmuy, Frederique Populus, Jean Rene, Jeremy Dick, Sjaak Brinkkemper, Matthias Weber, Philippe Baron:
Are Requirements Engineering best practices the same for all industries?.
448

Research Demonstrations
Poster Presentations
- Laure-Helene Jean-Baptiste, Camille Salinesi, Gauthier Fanmuy:
Sharing Methodological Knowledge with REGAL: "Requirements Engineering Guide for All".
461-462

- Luiz Marcio Cysneiros, Vera Werneck, André Kushniruk:
Reusable Knowledge for Satisficing Usability Requirements.
463-464

- Stéphane S. Somé:
Use Cases based Requirements Validation with Scenarios.
465-466

- Jameleddine Hassine, Juergen Rilling, Rachida Dssouli:
An ASM Operational Semantics for Use Case Maps.
467-468

- Margot Bittner, Ali Botorabi, Alexander Poth, Mark-Oliver Reiser, Matthias Weber:
Managing Variability and Reuse of Features and Requirements for Large and Complex Organizational Structures.
469-470

- Andriy V. Miranskyy, Nazim H. Madhavji, Matthew Davison, Mark Reesor:
Modelling Assumptions and Requirements in the Context of Project Risk.
471-472

- Marinos G. Georgiades, Andreas S. Andreou, Constantinos S. Pattichis:
A Requirements Engineering Methodology Based On Natural Language Syntax and Semantics.
473-474

- Ruzanna Chitchyan, Ian Sommerville, Awais Rashid:
CoCA: A Composition-Centric Approach to Requirements Engineering.
475-476

- Ana Ivanovic, Aga Matysiak, Klaas Sikkel, Roel Wieringa:
Eliciting User Requirements for Ambient Intelligent Systems: A Case Study.
477-478

- K. Li, R. J. Pooley:
Computer-Assisted and Customer-Oriented Requirements Elicitation.
479-480

- James Chisan, Daniela Damian:
Exploring the role of requirements engineering in improving risk management.
481-482

- Raimundas Matulevicius:
Prototype of the Evaluation Framework for Functional Requirements of RE-tools.
483-484

- Taichi Nakamura:
Analysis of Project Management Reports of 49 System Integration Projects.
485-486

- Américo Sampaio, Awais Rashid, Paul Rayson:
Early-AIM: An Approach for Identifying Aspects in Requirements.
487-488

- Lars Hagge, Kathrin Lappe, Tobias Schmidt:
REPARE: The Requirements Engineering Patterns Repository.
489-490

- Constanze Pott, Joost le Feber:
Using Cognitive Modeling for Requirements Engineering in Anesthesiology.
491-492

- Takashi Fuji:
Finding Competitive Advantage in Requirements Analysis Education.
493-494

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