2000
DOI: 10.1109/32.879820
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Handling obstacles in goal-oriented requirements engineering

Abstract: ÐRequirements engineering is concerned with the elicitation of high-level goals to be achieved by the envisioned system, the refinement of such goals and their operationalization into specifications of services and constraints and the assignment of responsibilities for the resulting requirements to agents such as humans, devices, and software. Requirements engineering processes often result in goals, requirements, and assumptions about agent behavior that are too ideal; some of them are likely not to be satisf… Show more

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Cited by 502 publications
(346 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
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“…Though, the bank is able to carry on both processes to ensure the repayment of the loan, the risk of a economic crisis may still disrupt the business objective. For this type of events, obstacle approach [20] can be used.…”
Section: Modeling Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Though, the bank is able to carry on both processes to ensure the repayment of the loan, the risk of a economic crisis may still disrupt the business objective. For this type of events, obstacle approach [20] can be used.…”
Section: Modeling Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…KAOS [20,24], a goal-oriented requirements engineering methodology, has been proposed aiming at identifying not only what and how aspect of goals but also why, who, and when. Moreover, KAOS introduces also the concept of obstacles [20] and antigoal [24], which can be seen as boundaries in goal analysis.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is the central aspect in GORE and present in all goal-oriented modeling approaches. "A goal is an objective the composite system should meet" [25].…”
Section: Conceptual Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This new construct makes it possible to represent actions that the system should prevent together with those actions which it should support. Moving towards early requirements, an extension of the KAOS framework is presented in [59] where the notion of obstacle is introduced. KAOS uses the notion of goal as a set of desired behaviors.…”
Section: Security Requirements Engineering: a Surveymentioning
confidence: 99%