| E. Yu, Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering, Presented at IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, 1993 |
....patterns using desirable qualities such as coordinability and predictability. 1. Introduction Modeling the organizational and intentional context within which a software system will eventually operate has been recognized as an important element of the requirements engineering process (e.g. [Ant96, Bub93, Dar93, Yu93]) Such models are founded on primitive concepts such as those of actor and goal. This paper focuses on the definition of a set of organizational patterns that can be used as building blocks for constructing such models. Our proposal is based on concepts adopted from organization theory and ....
E. Yu, "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
....In fact, the decision of using mentalistic notions in all the analysis phases has important consequences. In particular, In this, Tropos is largely inspired by Eric Yu s framework for requirements engineering, called i , which offers actors, goals, and actor dependencies as primitive concepts [23, 24, 26]. agent oriented specifications and programs use the same notions and abstractions used to describe the behavior of human agents and the processes involving them; thus, the conceptual gap between users specifications (in terms of why and what) and system realization (in terms of what and how) ....
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34-- 41, San Jose, January 1993.
....This research has been conducted within the context of the Tropos project. 1. Introduction Modeling the organizational and intentional context within which a software system will eventually operate has been recognized as an important part of the requirements engineering process (e.g. [Ant96, Bub93, Dar93, Yu93]) Such models are founded on primitive concepts such as those of actor and goal. This paper focuses on the definition of a set of organizational patterns which can be used as building blocks for constructing such models. Our proposal is based on concepts adopted from organization theory and ....
E. Yu, "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
.... These models have been formalized using intentional concepts from Artificial Intelligence, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. 11] The framework has been presented in detail in [24,52] and has been related to di#erent application areas, including requirements engineering [50], software processes [51] and business process reengineering [53] A strategic dependency model is a graph involving actors who have strategic dependencies among each other. A dependency describes an agreement (called dependum) between two actors: the depender and the dependee.The depender ....
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proc. of the 1st Int. Symposium on Requirements Engineering, RE'93, pages 34--41, San Jose, USA, Jan. 1993.
....in AOP one writes programs at the knowledge level. It forces the programmer to translate goals and the other mentalistic notions into software level notions, for instance the classes, attributes and methods of 2 i has been applied in various application areas, including requirements engineering [17], business process reengineering [21] and software modeling processes [20] cCultural infrastructure System usable spent services increase internet taxes well enjoy visit System eCulture Visitor eCulture Museum Citizen internet use available available provide PAT get ....
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, Jan. 1993. IEEE.
....within the context of a comprehensive software development methodology called Tropos. 1. Introduction Modeling the organizational and intentional context within which a software system will eventually operate has been recognized as an important part of the requirements engineering process (e.g. [Ant96, Bub93, Dar93, Yu93]) Such models are founded on primitive concepts such as those of actor (agent, position or role) and goal. In this paper we focus on the problem of defining a set of organizational patterns which can be used as building blocks for constructing such models. Our proposal is based on concepts ....
E. Yu, "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
....actors. These models have been formalized using intentional concepts from Artificial Intelligence, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. 6] The framework has been presented in detail in [29] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [27], business process reengineering [30] and software processes [28] A strategic dependency model is a graph involving actors who have strategic dependencies among each other. A dependency describes an agreement (called dependum) between two actors: the depender and the dependee. The depender is ....
Yu, E., "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering (RE'93), pp. 34-41, San Jose, USA, January 1993.
.... These models have been formalized using intentional concepts from Artificial Intelligence, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. 11] The framework has been presented in detail in [52,23] and has been related to di#erent application areas, including requirements engineering [50], software processes [51] and business process reengineering [53] A strategic dependency model is a graph involving actors who have strategic dependencies among each other. A dependency describes an agreement (called dependum) between two actors: the depender and the dependee.The depender ....
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proc. of the 1st Int. Symposium on Requirements Engineering, RE'93, pages 34--41, San Jose, USA, Jan. 1993.
....ways of fulfilling them. 2 These primitives have been formalized using intentional concepts from AI, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment. The i framework has been presented in detail in [11] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [10], business process reengineering [13] and software processes [12] An actor diagram is a graph, where each node represents an actor, and each link between two actors indicates that one actor depends on the other for something in order that the former may attain some goal. We call the depending ....
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993. IEEE.
....to discover ways of fulfilling them. These primitives have been formalized using intentional concepts from AI, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment. The framework has been presented in detail in [11] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [10], business process reengineering [13] and software processes [12] An actor diagram is a graph, where each node represents an actor, and each link between two actors indicates that one actor depends on the other for something in order that the former may attain some goal. We call the depending ....
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993. IEEE.
....ones, leading to a semantic gap between the system and its environment. To reduce as much as possible this gap, this paper proposes a development methodology named Tropos which is founded on concepts used to model early requirements. Our proposal adopts the i organizational modeling framework [21], which offers the notions of actor, goal and (actor) dependency, and uses these as a foundation to model early and late requirements, architectural and detailed design. The paper outlines Tropos phases through an e business example, and sketches a formal language which underlies the methodology ....
....with other actors. These models have been formalized using intentional concepts from AI, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. 5] The framework has been presented in detail in [20] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [21], software processes [22] and business process reengineering [23] A strategic dependency model is a graph, where each node represents an actor, and each link between two actors 3 indicates that one actor depends on another for something in order that the former may attain some goal. We call the ....
Yu, E., "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
....with other actors. These models have been formalized using intentional concepts from AI, such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. Coh90] The framework has been presented in detail in [Yu95] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [Yu93], business process reengineering [Yu96] and software processes [Yu94] 5 A strategic dependency model is a graph, where each node represents an actor, and each link between two actors indicates that one actor depends on the other for something in order that the former may attain some goal. We ....
Yu, E., "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
....its relationships with other actors. These models have been formalized using intentional concepts such as goal, belief, ability, and commitment (e.g. 7] The framework has been presented in detail in [1] and has been related to different application areas, including requirements engineering [8], business process reengineering [9] and software processes [10] A strategic dependency model is a graph, where each node represents an actor, and each link between two actors indicates that one actor depends on the other for something in order that the former may attain some goal. We call the ....
Yu, E., "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering," Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, January 1993, pp. 34-41.
No context found.
E. Yu, Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering, Presented at IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, 1993
No context found.
E. Yu, "Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering," presented at IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu, "Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering," in Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, January lEEE, 1993, pp. 34--41.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering, Proc. of the 1st IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pp. 34-41, 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993. IEEE.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering. In Proceedings First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, pages 34--41, San Jose, January 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu. Modeling organizations for information systems requirements engineering. In Proc. of the 1st Int. Symposium on Requirements Engineering, RE'93, pages 34--41, San Jose, USA, Jan. 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu, "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993.
No context found.
E. Yu, "Modeling Organizations for Information Systems Requirements Engineering", Proceedings of the First IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, San Jose, USA, January 1993.
First 50 documents
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC