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International
Workshop April 25, 2001 Imperial College, London |
This workshop is an invited working meeting for the members of the Program Committe of the International Symposium on Requirements Engineering and for the members of the Steering Committe of the International Symposium on Requirements Engineering and of the International Conference on Requirements Engineering.
It is a discussion-oriented workshop with sessions devoted to the following four topics:
Each session starts with two invited speakers who give a position statement or a short talk. Then there will be an open discussion, both on the talks and on other issues belonging to the topic of the session.
General Chair
Bashar
Nuseibeh, Open University, UK
Program Co-Chairs
Martin
Glinz, University of Zurich,
Switzerland
Roel
Wieringa, University of Twente, The
Netherlands
Local Organization
Alessandra
Russo, Imperial College, UK
Wednesday, April 25, 2001
08:45 - 09:00 Get together, opening remarks
09:00 - 10:30 Session 1: Problem frames in requirements engineering
Moderator: Roel Wieringa , University of Twente, The Netherlands
Michael
Jackson, Independent Consultant, UK
Problem frames
Neil
Maiden, City University, London
Rethinking patterns - the good, the bad and the beautiful
Open Discussion
10:30 - 11:00 Break
11:00 - 12:30 Session 2: Software requirements and systems engineering
Moderator: Sol Greenspan, Verizon, USA
Anthony
Hall, Praxis Critical Systems, UK
Software requirements are system requirements
Alistair
Sutcliffe UMIST, UK
On the inevitable intertwining of system and software
requirements
Open Discussion
12:30 - 13:30 Lunch
13:30 - 15:00 Session 3: Abstraction levels in requirements engineering
Moderator: Mats Heimdahl, University of Minnesota, USA
Martin
Glinz, University of Zurich,
Switzerland
Why decomposition and abstraction matters in requirements
engineering
Betty
Cheng, Michigan State University, USA
Integrating informal and formal approaches to requirements
engineering
Open Discussion
15:00 - 15:30 Break
15:30 - 17:00 Session 4: Natural language and requirements engineering
Moderator: Didar Zowghi, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
Colin
Potts, Georgia Institute of Technology,
USA
All a requirements engineer ever wanted to know about cognitive
linguistics (but was afraid to ask)
Dan
Berry, University of Waterloo, Canada
Natural language and requirements engineering - nu?
Open Discussion
17:00 - 17:10 Closing Session, Farewell
2001-05-03 Martin
Glinz, University of
Zurich