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2013 21st IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference (RE),
July 15–19, 2013,
Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Special Sessions
RE@21 Spotlight: Most Influential Papers from the Requirements Engineering Conference
Martin Glinz and Roel Wieringa
(University of Zurich, Switzerland; University of Twente, Netherlands)
Since 2003, an award has been presented annually at the IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference for the Most Influential Paper presented at the conference 10 years previously. In 2013, we celebrate 21 years of the Require¬ments Engineering Conference, and we use this as an opportunity to reflect on the Most Influential Papers to date. Two sessions of the 2013 conference highlight the work of previous award winners and provide the authors with the opportunity to describe the trajectory of their work over the ten years that led to the award, and to discuss its impact since.
@InProceedings{RE13p368,
author = {Martin Glinz and Roel Wieringa},
title = {RE@21 Spotlight: Most Influential Papers from the Requirements Engineering Conference},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {368--370},
doi = {},
year = {2013},
}
Video
Creative Collisions: Meet and Create: And Other “RE Interactive” Suggestions
Martin Mahaux and David Callele
(University of Namur, Belgium; University of Saskatchewan, Canada)
The International IEEE Requirements Engineering conference (RE) is the premier international forum for requirements engineering. However, participant interaction mechanisms have not received significant recent attention and conference attendees have suggested that interaction support could be improved. The “RE Interactive” program is a first implementation step to increase the level and quality of interaction at RE. We present here a brief background to the initiative, describe in greater detail those initiatives being introduced this year and summarize possible initiatives for future years. We describe in greater detail the focal “RE Interactive” session: Creative Collisions. This session aims to explore the power of combinatorial creativity to create unexpected ideas for the RE community by promoting creative engagements between individuals, focusing on forging new relationships within the community.
@InProceedings{RE13p371,
author = {Martin Mahaux and David Callele},
title = {Creative Collisions: Meet and Create: And Other “RE Interactive” Suggestions},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {371--372},
doi = {},
year = {2013},
}
Workshops and Doctoral Symposium at RE’13: The Results: Presentation Session of New Ideas for Researchers and Practitioners Who Weren’t There
Oliver Creighton and Marcos Borges
(Siemens, Germany; UFRJ, Brasil)
This paper describes the workshops held in conjunction with RE’13 and its corresponding presentation of results during the main conference. This paper presents the contents, structure, and format of the “Results” event: A slide show is followed by a poster session. This paper concludes with a complete list of all collocated workshops and their descriptions.
The audience members of this session can expect a highly dynamic, interactive discussion of what went on during the workshops. All the interesting, new, controversial, and pioneering ideas of these exciting preceding events can be absorbed in a memorable, enjoyable and fun way.
@InProceedings{RE13p373,
author = {Oliver Creighton and Marcos Borges},
title = {Workshops and Doctoral Symposium at RE’13: The Results: Presentation Session of New Ideas for Researchers and Practitioners Who Weren’t There},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {373--376},
doi = {},
year = {2013},
}
The Requirements Engineering Body of Knowledge (REBoK)
Birgit Penzenstadler, Daniel Méndez Fernández, Debra Richardson, David Callele, and Krzysztof Wnuk
(UC Irvine, USA; TU Munich, Germany; University of Saskatchewan, Canada; Lund University, Sweden)
A body of knowledge is a term used to represent the complete set of concepts, terms and activities that make up a professional domain. It encompasses the core teachings, skills and research in a field or industry. So far, the discipline of RE is lacking an official Requirements Engineering Body of Knowledge (REBoK).
This working session brings together researchers and practitioners to elaborate the goals, requirements and constraints for a REBoK that shall serve as commonly agreed basis for developing a draft over the following months.
@InProceedings{RE13p377,
author = {Birgit Penzenstadler and Daniel Méndez Fernández and Debra Richardson and David Callele and Krzysztof Wnuk},
title = {The Requirements Engineering Body of Knowledge (REBoK)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {377--379},
doi = {},
year = {2013},
}
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