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Huffman Hayes, Jane
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RE '14-PAN: "Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology ..."
Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology Transfer in the Requirements Engineering Domain (Panel)
Jane Huffman Hayes and Didar Zowghi
(University of Kentucky, USA; University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
Though the primary goal of requirements engineering research is to propose, develop, and validate effective solutions for important practical problems, practice has shown that successful projects take from 20-25 years to reach full industry adoption, while many projects fade and never advance beyond the initial research phase. In this interactive panel, teams of researchers, representing different requirements engineering research areas, bring ideas for technology transfer to a panel of industrial and government practitioners. The teams make interactive presentations and receive feedback from panelists. Beneath the game-show genre of the panel is the serious goal to foster conversation between practitioners and researchers to improve the effectiveness of technology transfer in the requirements engineering community.
@InProceedings{RE14p500,
author = {Jane Huffman Hayes and Didar Zowghi},
title = {Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology Transfer in the Requirements Engineering Domain (Panel)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {500--501},
doi = {},
year = {2014},
}
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Zowghi, Didar
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RE '14-PAN: "Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology ..."
Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology Transfer in the Requirements Engineering Domain (Panel)
Jane Huffman Hayes and Didar Zowghi
(University of Kentucky, USA; University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
Though the primary goal of requirements engineering research is to propose, develop, and validate effective solutions for important practical problems, practice has shown that successful projects take from 20-25 years to reach full industry adoption, while many projects fade and never advance beyond the initial research phase. In this interactive panel, teams of researchers, representing different requirements engineering research areas, bring ideas for technology transfer to a panel of industrial and government practitioners. The teams make interactive presentations and receive feedback from panelists. Beneath the game-show genre of the panel is the serious goal to foster conversation between practitioners and researchers to improve the effectiveness of technology transfer in the requirements engineering community.
@InProceedings{RE14p500,
author = {Jane Huffman Hayes and Didar Zowghi},
title = {Ready-Set-Transfer! Technology Transfer in the Requirements Engineering Domain (Panel)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {500--501},
doi = {},
year = {2014},
}
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