Techniques for requirements elicitation

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Abstract

This paper surveys and evaluates techniques for eliciting requirements of computer-based systems, paying particular attention to how they deal with social issues. The methods surveyed include introspection, interviews, questionnaires, and protocol, conversation, interaction, and discourse analyses. Although they are relatively untried in Requirements Engineering, we believe there is much promise in the last three techniques, which grew out of ethnomethodology and sociolinguistics. In particular, they can elicit tacit knowledge by observing actual interactions in the workplace, and can also be applied to the system development process itself.

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Goguen, J. A., & Linde, C. (1993). Techniques for requirements elicitation. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering (pp. 152–164). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.1109/ISRE.1993.324822

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