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RePa 2013 : Third International Workshop on Requirements Patterns | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.utdallas.edu/~supakkul/repa13 | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Call for Papers
--------------- Third International Workshop on Requirements Patterns (RePa’13) July 15, 2013, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In conjunction with the 21th IEEE Requirements Engineering Conference Getting requirements right is critical to the success of just about any software development project, and yet oftentimes challenging and in need of a large amount of knowledge and experience. "Patterns" have been used to capture knowledge of software development, concerning software architectures, designs, and more recently requirements engineering too. This workshop provides an open forum for researchers and practitioners to exchange ideas and experience, regarding pattern-based approaches to capturing, organizing, and reusing all aspects of requirements engineering-related knowledge, from both process and product perspectives. RePa’13 Workshop invites two types of submissions: papers on specific patterns and technical papers. The accepted papers will be available in a proceedings published by the IEEE Digital Library. Papers on Specific Patterns: A pattern paper presents one or more related requirements process/product patterns, including, but not limited to: - Requirements modeling patterns - Requirements engineering process/activities patterns - Application/domain-specific requirements patterns - Application/domain-independent requirements patterns - Functional requirements (FRs) patterns - Non-functional requirements (NFRs) patterns - Goal patterns - Social aspect patterns - Scenario patterns (e.g. use cases, user stories) - Workflow patterns - Business patterns - Analysis patterns - Problem patterns (e.g. anti-patterns, mis-use patterns, fault patterns, attack patterns) - Requirements to architecture/design mapping patterns Technical Papers: A technical paper may be a full or position research paper, an experience report, an empirical study, or a case study that reports findings on requirements pattern-related topics, including, but not limited to: - Pattern capturing - Pattern harvesting and mining - Pattern cataloging (e.g. by categories) - Pattern organization (e.g. by relationships such as uses, meta-pattern/occurrence, generalization/specialization, aggregation/decomposition) - Pattern searching, identification, and selection - Pattern reuse and application - Pattern quality - Pattern management - Tool support Workshop Co-chairs: Sam Supakkul, Sabre Inc., USA Lin Liu, Tsinghua University, China Liping Zhao, University of Manchester, UK Barbara Paech, University of Heidelberg, Germany Lawrence Chung, University of Texas at Dallas. USA Associate Chair: James Naish, University of Manchester, UK Program Committee: Ian Alexander, Scenario Plus, UK Daniel Amyot, University of Ottawa, Canada Paris Avgeriou, University of Groningen, The Netherlands Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Xavier Franch, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain Lars Hagge, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, Germany Robert Hanmer, Alcatel-Lucent, USA Kevlin Henney, Curbralan Limited, UK Frank Houdek, Daimler, Germany James Hulgan, Seilevel, USA Julio Cesar Leite, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Pericles Loucopoulos, Loughborough University, UK Colette Rolland, Université Paris1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France Rosana T. Vaccare Braga, ICMC-Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Axel van Lamsweerde, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium Michael Weiss, Carleton University, Canada Eric Yu, University of Toronto, Canada Important Dates: Submission: May 5, 2013 Notification: May 24, 2013 Camera-ready: June 7, 2013 Workshop: July 15, 2013 For more information and submission: Please visit www.utdallas.edu/~supakkul/repa13 |
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