DocumentCode :
1634470
Title :
Visual notation design 2.0: Towards user comprehensible requirements engineering notations
Author :
Caire, Patrice ; Genon, Nicolas ; Heymans, Patrick ; Moody, Daniel L.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxembourg
fYear :
2013
Firstpage :
115
Lastpage :
124
Abstract :
The success of requirements engineering depends critically on effective communication between business analysts and end users, yet empirical studies show that business stakeholders understand RE notations very poorly. This paper proposes a novel approach to designing RE visual notations that actively involves naïve users in the process. We use i*, one of the most influential RE notations, to demonstrate the approach, but the same approach could be applied to any RE notation. We present the results of 5 related empirical studies that show that novices outperform experts in designing symbols that are comprehensible to novices: the differences are both statistically significant and practically meaningful. Symbols designed by novices increased semantic transparency (their ability to be spontaneously interpreted by other novices) by almost 300% compared to the existing i* notation. The results challenge the conventional wisdom about visual notation design: that it should be conducted by a small group of experts; our research suggests that it should instead be conducted by large numbers of novices. The approach is consistent with Web 2.0, in that it harnesses the collective intelligence of end users and actively involves them in the notation design process as “prosumers” rather than passive consumers. We believe this approach has the potential to radically change the way visual notations are designed in the future.
Keywords :
Internet; formal specification; statistical analysis; user centred design; visual languages; RE notations; Web 2.0; business analysts; business stakeholders; collective intelligence; empirical research; end users; i* notation; prosumers; semantic transparency property; statistical analysis; user comprehensible requirements engineering notations; visual notation design 2.0; Analytical models; Biological system modeling; Business; Prototypes; Semantics; Standards; Visualization; Visual languages; analysis; empirical research; end user communication; modelling; requirements analysis;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Requirements Engineering Conference (RE), 2013 21st IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Rio de Janeiro
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RE.2013.6636711
Filename :
6636711
Link To Document :
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