Article | REF: H3250 V2

From conceptual modeling to requirements engineering

Author: Colette ROLLAND

Publication date: February 10, 2011 | Lire en français

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Overview

ABSTRACT

The critical impact of requirements analysis has long been well known. Recent investigations have confirmed the existence of this issue on a larger scale. The failure of information systems projects are, in one out of two cases, attributable to the lack of quality of the requirement document. It is therefore essential to improve the quality of this document as well as the practices of Requirements Engineering (RI). This objective is however difficult to achieve due to the wide array of considerations to be taken into account, the multiplicity of the concerned processes and products, the vast number of actors to be involved and the amount of pitfalls to avoid. RI is a discipline bordering on software engineering and systems engineering which aims at providing the necessary methods, models and tools in order to develop quality requirement documents and make them evolve. This article provides an overview of the recent developments within this relatively young discipline and an in-depth analysis of some of them. RI broadens the classical approach of what the system has to achieve by trying to understand the reasons and needs for its existence.

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AUTHOR

  • Colette ROLLAND: University of Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, Computer Science Research Center

 INTRODUCTION

The critical impact of requirements analysis on software quality has long been recognized and repeatedly demonstrated. Recent surveys in Europe and the United States have confirmed the problem on a larger scale. In half of all cases, IT project failures can be attributed to poor-quality requirements documentation.

Improving the quality of this document, as well as the practice of Requirements Engineering (RE), is therefore a key objective. This objective is not easy to achieve, given the wide range of considerations to be covered, the multitude of processes and products involved, the multitude of stakeholders to be involved, and the variety of pitfalls to be avoided. RE is a discipline at the intersection of software engineering and systems engineering, which aims to provide models, methods, and tools for developing and evolving high-quality requirements documents. This article aims to provide an overview of recent developments in this relatively young discipline and to explore some of them in greater depth. EI broadens the traditional approach, which seeks to understand what the system must achieve by trying to understand the "why" of the system, its raison d'être.

The expression of "why" is expressed in terms of organizational goals and their impact on the requirements imposed on the information system. The article emphasizes this dimension, proposes and illustrates, through a case study, a goal-driven requirements engineering approach.

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