SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS

A large number of software projects exist and will continue to be developed that have textual requirements and textual design elements where the design elements should fully satisfy the requirements. Current techniques to assess the satisfaction of requirements by corresponding design elements are l...

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Main Author: Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee
Format: Others
Published: UKnowledge 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/712
http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1715&context=gradschool_diss
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spelling ndltd-uky.edu-oai-uknowledge.uky.edu-gradschool_diss-17152015-04-11T05:02:38Z SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee A large number of software projects exist and will continue to be developed that have textual requirements and textual design elements where the design elements should fully satisfy the requirements. Current techniques to assess the satisfaction of requirements by corresponding design elements are largely manual processes that lack formal criteria and standard practices. Software projects that require satisfaction assessment are often very large systems containing several hundred requirements and design elements. Often these projects are within a high assurance project domain, where human lives and millions of dollars of funding are at stake. Manual satisfaction assessment is expensive in terms of hours of human effort and project budget. Automated techniques are not currently applied to satisfaction assessment. This dissertation addresses the problem of automated satisfaction assessment for English, textual documents and the generation of candidate satisfaction assessments that can then be verified by a human analyst with far less effort and time expenditure than is required to produce a manual satisfaction assessment. Validation results to date show that automated satisfaction methods produce candidate satisfaction assessments sufficient to greatly reduce the effort required to assess the satisfaction of textual requirements by textual design elements. 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/712 http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1715&context=gradschool_diss University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations UKnowledge Satisfaction Assessment|Automated Requirements Analysis|Traceability|Textual Software Artifacts Computer Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Satisfaction Assessment|Automated Requirements Analysis|Traceability|Textual Software Artifacts
Computer Sciences
spellingShingle Satisfaction Assessment|Automated Requirements Analysis|Traceability|Textual Software Artifacts
Computer Sciences
Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee
SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
description A large number of software projects exist and will continue to be developed that have textual requirements and textual design elements where the design elements should fully satisfy the requirements. Current techniques to assess the satisfaction of requirements by corresponding design elements are largely manual processes that lack formal criteria and standard practices. Software projects that require satisfaction assessment are often very large systems containing several hundred requirements and design elements. Often these projects are within a high assurance project domain, where human lives and millions of dollars of funding are at stake. Manual satisfaction assessment is expensive in terms of hours of human effort and project budget. Automated techniques are not currently applied to satisfaction assessment. This dissertation addresses the problem of automated satisfaction assessment for English, textual documents and the generation of candidate satisfaction assessments that can then be verified by a human analyst with far less effort and time expenditure than is required to produce a manual satisfaction assessment. Validation results to date show that automated satisfaction methods produce candidate satisfaction assessments sufficient to greatly reduce the effort required to assess the satisfaction of textual requirements by textual design elements.
author Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee
author_facet Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee
author_sort Holbrook, Elizabeth Ashlee
title SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
title_short SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
title_full SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
title_fullStr SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
title_full_unstemmed SATISFACTION ASSESSMENT OF TEXTUAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARTIFACTS
title_sort satisfaction assessment of textual software engineering artifacts
publisher UKnowledge
publishDate 2009
url http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/712
http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1715&context=gradschool_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT holbrookelizabethashlee satisfactionassessmentoftextualsoftwareengineeringartifacts
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