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REPOS 2012 : First International Workshop on Requirements Engineering Practices on Software Product Line Engineering | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.dsic.upv.es/workshops/repos2012/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Last CALL FOR PAPERS
First International Workshop on REQUIREMENTS ENGINEERING PRACTICES ON SOFTWARE PRODUCT LINE ENGINEERING REPOS 2012 - http://www.dsic.upv.es/workshops/repos2012/ co-located with the 16th International Software Product Line Conference (SPLC 2012), Salvador, Brazil - September 4, 2012 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Highlights: The best papers of the Workshop will be invited to submit an extended version to the Requirements Engineering Journal - SPECIAL ISSUE on "Requirements Engineering in Software Product Line Engineering", which is scheduled in the last quarter of 2013. The RE journal is included in the Journal Citations Reports (JCR). -------------------------------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT DATES Submissions deadline: May 25, 2012 Authors notification: June 15, 2012 Camera-ready: June 29, 2012 Workshop: September 4, 2012 (one full-day) MOTIVATION Several attempts have been made to increase the productivity and quality of software products. A very promising approach is software reuse. Software product line practice is one approach to software reuse, which focuses on developing a family of products which have a majority of features in common. Hence, there are numerous requirements that are common across the family but others are unique to individual products. Requirements Engineering (RE) processes and techniques are used to identify and characterize product line requirements and potential member products considering their commonalities and variability. In addition, they also involve activities such as product line requirements modeling, specification, verification and management. Due to the complexity and extensive nature of product line development, requirements engineering is much more important for a software product line practice than for single product development. However, most of the existing software product line practices do not completely address the RE process in a comprehensive manner. The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners to exchange ideas, experiences and identify current obstacles and propose solutions to improve the current body-of-knowledge and practice in this area. TOPICS The topics of interest include, but are not limited to: - Requirements elicitation, analysis, documentation, validation and verification for SPL - Techniques or methods tailored for requirements engineering in a SPL - Quality requirements and variability management in a SPL - Relating product lines requirements to business goals, architecture and testing - Value-driven requirements engineering for a SPL - Agile requirements engineering for SPL - Evolution of SPL requirements - Security requirements in product line engineering - Non-functional requirements and their dependence on application domain - Quality assessment of requirements models for SPL - Development environments and tools for managing requirements in a SPL - Model-driven approaches for product line requirements engineering - Domain-specific problems, experiences and solutions in SPL development - Empirical studies in the area of SPL requirements engineering - Experience reports including problems or success in the process of requirements engineering for a SPL GOALS The objective of this workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners to report on and discuss the challenges and opportunities for using different requirements engineering techniques in product line engineering to achieve both technical and business goals. The workshop will provide a reference forum in which (1) practitioners get to know the current findings in product line requirements engineering, and how they can transfer those methods to their particular domain, and (2) researchers get to know the real problems organizations are facing when tackling the requirements engineering activity in particular domains. An issue of particular importance is the level of detail for requirements specifications including variability and their traceability to other core assets. This will have a direct impact on the techniques to be used, the evolution to be supported, the analysis of impact for changes and evolution, etc. When to evaluate the quality of these requirements and how to perform a cost-effective and value-driven approach for these activities are still open issues in the product line development community. We are looking for contributions that not only discuss technical and theoretical aspects, but also methodological and practical issues related to requirements engineering in a product line. The workshop is also looking for industry contributions describing empirical results and successful practices that may be generalized from specific domains. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES AND REVIEW PROCESS Submissions of 4 to 8 pages are solicited that describe substantial completed work, or work in progress, or position papers. The papers are expected to comprise original work not previously published. The workshop papers can be submitted in any format but accepted papers should follow the ACM formatting and grant ACM copyright (http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates). Authors are invited to submit their papers electronically in PDF format at https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=repos2012 Submissions will be evaluated according to both the relevance and originality of the work and their ability to generate discussion among the workshop participants. The submissions should clearly emphasize the discussion aspects relevant to the workshop. PUBLICATION The workshop proceedings will be published by ACM in a separate volume, next to the volume that contains the SPLC 2012 conference. A selection of the best papers of the Workshop will be invited to submit an extended version to the Requirements Engineering Journal - SPECIAL ISSUE on "Requirements Engineering in Software Product Line Engineering", which is scheduled in the last quarter of 2013. PROGRAM COMMITTEE Antonio Ruiz-Cortés, University of Sevilla, Spain. Deepak Dhungana, Siemens AG Österreich, Austria. Gunter Mussbacher, Carleton University, Canada. Isabel John, Hochschule Würzburg Schweinfurt, Germany. Isidro Ramos, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain. Jaejoon Lee, Lancaster University, UK. João Araújo, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal. John McGregor, Clemson University, USA. Jörg Dörr, Fraunhofer IESE, Germany. Julio Cesar Leite, PUC-Rio, Brazil. Karina Villela, Fraunhofer IESE, Germany. Klaus Schmid, University Hildesheim, Germany. Larry Jones, Software Engineering Institute (SEI-CMU), USA. Manfred Broy,Technische Universität München, Germany. Pete Sawyer, Lancaster University, UK. Roel Wieringa, University of Twente, Netherlands. Sholom Cohen, Software Engineering Institute (SEI-CMU), USA. Silvia Abrahão, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain. WORSHOP ORGANIZERS Emilio Insfran Research Affiliate at Software Engineering Institute (SEI), USA Associate Professor at Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain E-mail: einsfran@dsic.upv.es URL: http://www.dsic.upv.es/~einsfran/ Gary Chastek Software Engineering Institute. Carnegie-Mellon University, USA E-mail: gjc@sei.cmu.edu URL: www.sei.cmu.edu/about/people/gjc.cfm Patrick Donohoe Software Engineering Institute. Carnegie-Mellon University, USA E-mail: pd@sei.cmu.edu URL: http://www.sei.cmu.edu/about/people/profile.cfm?id=donohoe_13045 |
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