Where do Goals Come from: the Underlying Principles of Goal-Oriented Requirements Engineering
G. Regev, and A. Wegmann. RE '05: Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering, page 253--362. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (2005)
Abstract
Goal is a widely used concept in requirements engineering methods. Several kinds of goals, such as achievement, maintenance and soft goals, have been defined in these methods. These methods also define heuristics for the identification of organizational goals that drive the requirements process. In this paper we propose a set of principles that explain the nature of goal-oriented behavior. These principles are based on regulation mechanisms as defined in General Systems Thinking and Cybernetics. We use these principles to analyze the existing definitions of these different kinds of goals and to propose more precise definitions. We establish the commonalities and differences between these kinds of goals, and propose extension for goal identification heuristics.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 paper:regev:2005
%A Regev, Gil
%A Wegmann, Alain
%B RE '05: Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering
%C Washington, DC, USA
%D 2005
%I IEEE Computer Society
%K 2005 RE engineering goals requirement types
%P 253--362
%T Where do Goals Come from: the Underlying Principles of Goal-Oriented Requirements Engineering
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/RE.2005.80
%X Goal is a widely used concept in requirements engineering methods. Several kinds of goals, such as achievement, maintenance and soft goals, have been defined in these methods. These methods also define heuristics for the identification of organizational goals that drive the requirements process. In this paper we propose a set of principles that explain the nature of goal-oriented behavior. These principles are based on regulation mechanisms as defined in General Systems Thinking and Cybernetics. We use these principles to analyze the existing definitions of these different kinds of goals and to propose more precise definitions. We establish the commonalities and differences between these kinds of goals, and propose extension for goal identification heuristics.
@inproceedings{paper:regev:2005,
abstract = {Goal is a widely used concept in requirements engineering methods. Several kinds of goals, such as achievement, maintenance and soft goals, have been defined in these methods. These methods also define heuristics for the identification of organizational goals that drive the requirements process. In this paper we propose a set of principles that explain the nature of goal-oriented behavior. These principles are based on regulation mechanisms as defined in General Systems Thinking and Cybernetics. We use these principles to analyze the existing definitions of these different kinds of goals and to propose more precise definitions. We establish the commonalities and differences between these kinds of goals, and propose extension for goal identification heuristics.},
added-at = {2008-06-27T12:09:37.000+0200},
address = {Washington, DC, USA},
author = {Regev, Gil and Wegmann, Alain},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2bf9bff4f99d460ccddca46c4917dc6f2/mschuber},
booktitle = {RE '05: Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering},
interhash = {b9461a90e2f76eb21a342eb91000d3bb},
intrahash = {bf9bff4f99d460ccddca46c4917dc6f2},
keywords = {2005 RE engineering goals requirement types},
pages = {253--362},
publisher = {IEEE Computer Society},
timestamp = {2008-09-09T12:53:22.000+0200},
title = {Where do Goals Come from: the Underlying Principles of Goal-Oriented Requirements Engineering},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/RE.2005.80},
year = 2005
}