| Kamsties E (2001) Surfacing ambiguity in natural language requirements. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universita t Kaiserslautern, Germany, also volume 5 of PhD theses in Experimental Software Engineering, Fraunhofer IRB, Stuttgart |
....requirements specifications. In any requirements specification document, there may be hidden ambiguities. Each such hidden ambiguity gets subconsciously disambiguated one way by each stakeholder, e.g. the user and the implementer, who is not even aware that other meanings exist for the sentence [20]. The ambiguities are discovered only later when the CBS is delivered and the user discovers that the implementer did not implement what he or she understood of the specification. In our experience in the production of several user s manual specifications of WD Pic, the students clarified a number ....
Kamsties, E., "Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements," Ph.D. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universitat Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany (2001).
No context found.
Kamsties, E., "Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements", Ph.D. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universit at Kaiserslautern, Germany, also Volume 5 of Ph.D. Theses in Experimental Software Engineering, Fraunhofer IRB Verlag, Stuttgart, Germany (2001).
....considered [24] In the requirements documents that we have investigated, RE specific ambiguities account for the majority of ambiguities, while purely linguistic ambiguities played a less significant role. For one requirements document, 4 linguistic but 54 RE specific ambiguities were reported [19]. We propose in this paper an inspection technique for detecting ambiguities that is based on a checklist and scenario based reading [3] Checklists are widely applied in industry, and scenario based reading has been demonstrated in industry as an effective method to defect detection [3] The ....
....and of the tailoring approach. Finally, Section 8 concludes the paper. This paper is based on research conducted by the first author under the other authors supervision. This work is described in the first author s Ph.D. dissertation, titled Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements [19]. Due to space limitations, this paper presents only one technique and tailoring to only one specific RE context. The full dissertation describes several techniques and tailorings to several contexts. It describes experimental validation for all the techniques and tailorings and ranks them by ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Kamsties, E., "Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements," Ph.D. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universitat Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany (2001).
....because of the customers reluctance to read requirements written in artificial language and theoretical limitations of simulation. We recommend the inspection of informal requirements for ambiguities to avoid these problems. An inspection technique for spotting ambiguities is introduced in [Kam01]. 2. Participation of customers and users during formalization. The development of requirements models from informal requirements is a task of requirements engineers, not customers or users. Nevertheless, we recommend participation of customers and users during the development of these models, ....
E. Kamsties, Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements, PhD Thesis, Univ. of Kaiserslautern, 2001.
....considered [24] In the requirements documents that we have investigated, RE specific ambiguities account for the majority of ambiguities, while purely linguistic ambiguities played a less significant role. For one requirements document, 4 linguistic but 54 RE specific ambiguities were reported [19]. We propose in this paper an inspection technique for detecting ambiguities that is based on a checklist and scenario based reading [3] Checklists are widely applied in industry, and scenario based reading has been demonstrated in industry as an effective method to defect detection [3] The ....
....and of the tailoring approach. Finally, Section 8 concludes the paper. This paper is based on research conducted by the first author under the other authors supervision. This work is described in the first author s Ph.D. dissertation, titled Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements [19]. Due to space limitations, this paper presents only one technique and tailoring to only one specific RE context. The full dissertation describes several techniques and tailorings to several contexts. It describes experimental validation for all the techniques and tailorings and ranks them by ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Kamsties, E., "Surfacing Ambiguity in Natural Language Requirements," Ph.D. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universitat Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany (2001).
No context found.
Kamsties E (2001) Surfacing ambiguity in natural language requirements. Dissertation, Fachbereich Informatik, Universita t Kaiserslautern, Germany, also volume 5 of PhD theses in Experimental Software Engineering, Fraunhofer IRB, Stuttgart
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