DocumentCode
3367582
Title
An Empirical Investigation on Text-Based Communication in Distributed Requirements Workshops
Author
Calefato, Fabio ; Damian, Daniela ; Lanubile, Filippo
Author_Institution
Univ. of Bari, Bari
fYear
2007
fDate
27-30 Aug. 2007
Firstpage
3
Lastpage
11
Abstract
Among the software development activities, requirements engineering is one of the most communication-intensive and then, its effectiveness is greatly constrained by the geographical distance between stakeholders. For this reason, the need to identify the appropriate task/technology fits to support teams of geographically dispersed stakeholders plays a key role for coping with the lack of physical proximity when developing requirements. In this paper we report on an empirical study that assessed the use of synchronous text-based communication in distributed requirements workshops, as compared to face-to-face (F2F), and the effects of computer-mediated communication (CMC), with respects to the different tasks of distributed requirements elicitation and negotiation. First results show that, in terms of satisfaction with performance, CMC elicitation is a better task/technology fit than CMC negotiation. Furthermore, the general preference for F2F over CMC is due to the strong preference for the F2F negotiation fit over the CMC counterpart.
Keywords
computer mediated communication; distributed processing; formal specification; text analysis; computer-mediated communication; distributed requirement engineering workshop; face-to-face communication; software development activity; text-based communication; Appropriate technology; Collaborative software; Computer mediated communication; Computer science; Context; Counting circuits; Decision making; Organizing; Programming; Teleconferencing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Software Engineering, 2007. ICGSE 2007. Second IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Munich
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-2920-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICGSE.2007.9
Filename
4299834
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