Title :
Systematic derivation of conceptual models from requirements models: A controlled experiment
Author :
España, Sergio ; Ruiz, Marcela ; González, Arturo
Author_Institution :
PROS Res. Centre, Univ. Politec. de Valencia, València, Spain
Abstract :
There is an open challenge in the area of model-driven requirements engineering. Model transformations that allow deriving (platform-independent) conceptual models from (computation-independent) requirements models are being proposed. However, rigorous assessments of the quality of the resulting conceptual models are needed. This paper reports a controlled experiment that compares the performance of subjects applying two different techniques for deriving object-oriented, UML-compliant conceptual models. We compare the quality of the OO-Method conceptual models obtained by applying a text-based derivation technique (which mimics what OO-Method practitioners actually do in real projects) with the quality obtained by applying a novel communication-based derivation technique (which takes as input Communication Analysis requirements models). The results show that there is an interaction between the derivation technique and the OO-Method modelling competence of the subject: the derivation technique has a significant impact on model completeness within the high-competence group. No impact has been observed on model validity. We also discuss new challenges raised by the evaluation.
Keywords :
Unified Modeling Language; business data processing; formal verification; management information systems; object-oriented methods; text analysis; OO-method conceptual model quality; Unified Modeling Language; communication analysis requirements models; communication-based derivation technique; computation-independent requirements models; model transformations; model-driven requirements engineering; object-oriented-UML-compliant conceptual models; performance comparison; platform-independent conceptual models; text-based derivation technique; Analytical models; Business; Computational modeling; Information systems; Object oriented modeling; Training; Unified modeling language; Communication Analysis; Information systems; OO-Method; business process model; conceptual model; controlled experiment; empirical validation; model transformation; model-driven requirements engineering; requirements model;
Conference_Titel :
Research Challenges in Information Science (RCIS), 2012 Sixth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Valencia
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1936-3
Electronic_ISBN :
2151-1349
DOI :
10.1109/RCIS.2012.6240428