W. Lam, and M. Loomes. Euromicro Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering, page 121-127. Florence, Italy, IEEE, (March 1998)Requirements evolve, not only during system development but also after a system has been installed. The aim of the work on the EVE (EVolution Engineering) project is to develop practi-cal methods for dealing with requirements evolution. This pa-per presents the early output from our work-the EVE frame-work for requirements evolution. The EVE framework is com-prised of two components: a meta-model and an associated process model. The EVE meta-model captures a set of model-ling concepts in requirements evolution, including change, impact, risk and viewpoint. The EVE process model provides technologists with a framework for handling the emergence of new or changing requirements during the lifetime of a system. The paper illustrates the EVE framework on a simple example, and highlights the importance of social and environmental re-sponsibility in requirements evolution..
G. Romanski. IEEE International Conference on Requirements Engineering, page 304. Monterey Bay, CA, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (September 2003)Keynote.
L. Chung, B. Nixon, and E. Yu. RE '95: Proceedings of the Second IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering, page 132--139. York, England, IEEE Computer Society, (27--29 March 1995)
E. Ecklund, L. Delcambre, and M. Freiling. OOPSLA: ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming, systems,
languages, and applications, page 342--358. San Jose, CA, ACM Press, (1996)
S. Anderson, and M. Felici. International Conference on Product Focused Software Profess Improvement, page 27--41. Kaiserslautern, Germany, Springer, (September 2001)
A. Etien, C. Rolland, and C. Salinesi. International Conference on Software Engineering and Data Technologies (ICSOFT), Special session on Meta-modelling, Setubal, Portugal, (11-14 September 2006)