by Norbert Seyff, Christoph Hoyer, Erich Kroiher, Paul Grünbacher
Abstract:
Conventional team processes in software engineering are typically designed to support face-to-face interactions among stakeholders. This paradigm has changed and distributed software development (DSE) becomes a dominant approach in many settings. Despite the fact that distributed software engineering is inevitable in today's software engineering practice there are still many unsolved issues. This paper reports our research in distributed and mobile requirement negotiation. We describe the EasyWinWin (EWW) negotiation approach and identify issues in face-to-face negotiations and discuss how we aim to overcome these with distributed and mobile tools. We also report the results of an empirical exploration study examining the usability of our tools.
Reference:
Enhancing GSS-based Requirements Negotiation with Distributed and Mobile Tools (Norbert Seyff, Christoph Hoyer, Erich Kroiher, Paul Grünbacher), In Proceedings 14th IEEE Int'l Workshops on Enabling Technologies (WETICE 2005), June 13-15, Linköping, Sweden, IEEE Computer Society, 2005.
Bibtex Entry:
@Conference{Seyff2005,
author = {Norbert Seyff and Christoph Hoyer and Erich Kroiher and Paul Grünbacher},
title = {Enhancing GSS-based Requirements Negotiation with Distributed and
Mobile Tools},
booktitle = {Proceedings 14th IEEE Int'l Workshops on Enabling Technologies (WETICE
2005), June 13-15, Linköping, Sweden},
year = {2005},
pages = {87-92},
publisher = {IEEE Computer Society},
abstract = {Conventional team processes in software engineering are typically
designed to support face-to-face interactions among stakeholders.
This paradigm has changed and distributed software development (DSE)
becomes a dominant approach in many settings. Despite the fact that
distributed software engineering is inevitable in today's software
engineering practice there are still many unsolved issues. This paper
reports our research in distributed and mobile requirement negotiation.
We describe the EasyWinWin (EWW) negotiation approach and identify
issues in face-to-face negotiations and discuss how we aim to overcome
these with distributed and mobile tools. We also report the results
of an empirical exploration study examining the usability of our
tools.},
doi = {10.1109/WETICE.2005.34},
isbn = {0-7695-2362-5},
researchr = {http://researchr.org/publication/SeyffHKG05},
tags = {mobile}
}