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Requirements engineering is one of the most complex and at the same
time most crucial aspects of software engineering. It typically
involves different stakeholders with different backgrounds.
Constant changes in both the problem and the solution domain make
the work of the stakeholders extremely dynamic. New problems are
discovered, additional information is needed, alternative solutions
are proposed, several options are evaluated, and new hands-on
experience is gained on a daily basis. The knowledge needed to
define and implement requirements is immense, often
interdisciplinary and constantly expanding. It typically includes
engineering, management and collaboration information, as well as
psychological aspects and best practices. This book discusses
systematic means for managing requirements knowledge and its owners
as valuable assets. It focuses on potentials and benefits of
"lightweight," modern knowledge technologies such as semantic
Wikis, machine learning, and recommender systems applied to
requirements engineering. The 17 chapters are authored by some of
the most renowned researchers in the field, distilling the
discussions held over the last five years at the MARK workshop
series. They present novel ideas, emerging methodologies,
frameworks, tools and key industrial experience in capturing,
representing, sharing, and reusing knowledge in requirements
engineering. While the book primarily addresses researchers and
graduate students, practitioners will also benefit from the reports
and approaches presented in this comprehensive work.
Requirements engineering is one of the most complex and at the same
time most crucial aspects of software engineering. It typically
involves different stakeholders with different backgrounds.
Constant changes in both the problem and the solution domain make
the work of the stakeholders extremely dynamic. New problems are
discovered, additional information is needed, alternative solutions
are proposed, several options are evaluated, and new hands-on
experience is gained on a daily basis. The knowledge needed to
define and implement requirements is immense, often
interdisciplinary and constantly expanding. It typically includes
engineering, management and collaboration information, as well as
psychological aspects and best practices. This book discusses
systematic means for managing requirements knowledge and its owners
as valuable assets. It focuses on potentials and benefits of
"lightweight," modern knowledge technologies such as semantic
Wikis, machine learning, and recommender systems applied to
requirements engineering. The 17 chapters are authored by some of
the most renowned researchers in the field, distilling the
discussions held over the last five years at the MARK workshop
series. They present novel ideas, emerging methodologies,
frameworks, tools and key industrial experience in capturing,
representing, sharing, and reusing knowledge in requirements
engineering. While the book primarily addresses researchers and
graduate students, practitioners will also benefit from the reports
and approaches presented in this comprehensive work.
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