TY - GEN
T1 - Towards a general formal framework of Coherence Management in RE
AU - Borgida, Alexander
AU - Jureta, Ivan
AU - Zamansky, Anna
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2015 IEEE.
PY - 2015/11/4
Y1 - 2015/11/4
N2 - Coherence Management refers to all efforts one needs to invest, in order to ensure that information shown in, and implied by a representation of requirements makes sense as a whole, is coherent. Coherence Management is an umbrella term we use to cover, and more importantly, stimulate research on relationships between identification, measurement, and action on phenomena which reflect tensions between information in requirements representations. Such tensions exist between information which is, for example, logically inconsistent, or stakeholders disagree on, or signals tradeoffs (meaning that improvement on some requirements, for instance, necessarily means some quantifiable (or not) deterioration of others). These tensions are an important topic of research in Requirements Engineering, and various methods have been proposed for the identification, measurement, and action on logical inconsistency in requirements models, on negotiating disagreements, and on settling tradeoffs. Despite focusing on related phenomena, these methods are different and each come with their own specific definition of when a representation of requirements is incoherent and what to do about it. This makes it hard to compare existing methods, design new ones, and choose those to apply when doing RE. In this short communication we outline our research agenda for developing a unified formal framework for the systematization and classification of Coherence Management efforts in the context of RE, as well as exploring their compatibility.
AB - Coherence Management refers to all efforts one needs to invest, in order to ensure that information shown in, and implied by a representation of requirements makes sense as a whole, is coherent. Coherence Management is an umbrella term we use to cover, and more importantly, stimulate research on relationships between identification, measurement, and action on phenomena which reflect tensions between information in requirements representations. Such tensions exist between information which is, for example, logically inconsistent, or stakeholders disagree on, or signals tradeoffs (meaning that improvement on some requirements, for instance, necessarily means some quantifiable (or not) deterioration of others). These tensions are an important topic of research in Requirements Engineering, and various methods have been proposed for the identification, measurement, and action on logical inconsistency in requirements models, on negotiating disagreements, and on settling tradeoffs. Despite focusing on related phenomena, these methods are different and each come with their own specific definition of when a representation of requirements is incoherent and what to do about it. This makes it hard to compare existing methods, design new ones, and choose those to apply when doing RE. In this short communication we outline our research agenda for developing a unified formal framework for the systematization and classification of Coherence Management efforts in the context of RE, as well as exploring their compatibility.
KW - Inconsistency Management
KW - Requirements Engineering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84962376155&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/RE.2015.7320436
DO - 10.1109/RE.2015.7320436
M3 - Conference contribution
T3 - 2015 IEEE 23rd International Requirements Engineering Conference, RE 2015 - Proceedings
SP - 274
EP - 277
BT - 2015 IEEE 23rd International Requirements Engineering Conference, RE 2015 - Proceedings
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
T2 - 23rd IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference, RE 2015
Y2 - 24 August 2015 through 28 August 2015
ER -