CrowdRE 2017 : 2nd International Workshop on Crowd-Based Requirements Engineering

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2nd International Workshop on Crowd-Based Requirements Engineering (CrowdRE 2017)
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In conjunction with RE '17 – 4 September 2017, Lisbon, Portugal

https://crowdre.github.io/ws-2017/

MOTIVATION & GOAL:

The rise of mobile, social and cloud apps pose new challenges and opportunities to the field of requirements engineering (RE). Traditional techniques have difficulties scaling up to settings with thousands up to millions of users of a (software) product who form a large and heterogeneous group that can be denoted as a ‘crowd’. Researchers have identified several issues with applying RE in the new crowd paradigm. Initial methods and tools are being investigated, but we see the need for more tailored and holistic approaches focusing on Crowd-Based Requirements Engineering.

The Second Workshop on Crowd-Based Requirements Engineering (CrowdRE 2017) builds on the success of its first edition, which achieved the unification of visions into a coherent RE approach. It aims to attract papers with novel and innovative ideas on CrowdRE, and to facilitate interactive discussions between scientists and representatives of industry in order to define a roadmap for CrowdRE, assess the role of CrowdRE in the software development lifecycle, and work towards a shared base of CrowdRE resources.

SUBMISSIONS:

CrowdRE is looking for general submissions containing original research (depending on the paper type 4 to 6 pages IEEE
format submitted through EasyChair). A unique kind of submission is “competition papers” that provide the solution to
the problem scenario provided on our website. See the workshop website for details on all paper categories we accept. Each submission will be reviewed by three reviewers.

IMPORTANT DATES:

Paper Submission: 9 June 2017
Paper Notification: 30 June 2017
Camera Ready Due: 16 July 2017

PROGRAM COMMITTEE:

Nirav Ajmeri, North Carolina State University (USA)
Raian Ali, Bournemouth University (UK)
Daniel Berry, University of Waterloo (Canada)
Travis D. Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University (USA)
Fabiano Dalpiaz, Utrecht University (the Netherlands)
Daniela Damian, University of Victoria (Canada)
Joerg Doerr, Fraunhofer IESE (Germany)
Anthony Finkelstein, University College London (UK)
Vicenzo Gervasi, University of Pisa (Italy)
Sarah Gregory, Intel Corporation (USA)
Emitza Guzman, Tech. University of Munich (Germany)
Irit Hader, University of Haifa (Israel)
Mahmood Hosseini, University of Massachusetts (USA)
Zhi Jin, Peking University (China)
Marjo Kauppinen, University of Helsinki (Finland)
Fitsum M. Kifetew, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (Italy)
Tong Li, University of Trento (Italy)
Soo Ling Lim, University College London (UK)
Walid Maalej, University of Hamburg (Germany)
Marc Oriol, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (Spain)
Itzel Morales Ramirez, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (Italy)
Björn Regnell, Lund University (Sweden)
Kurt Schneider, Leibniz Universität Hannover (Germany)
Munidar P. Singh, North Carolina State University (USA)
Irina Todoran, University of Zurich (Switzerland)

GENERAL CHAIRS:

Xavier Franch, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (Spain)
Anna Perini, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (Italy)

ADDITIONAL ORGANIZERS:

Eduard C. Groen, Fraunhofer IESE (Germany)
Pradeep K. Murukannaiah, Rochester Institute of Technology (USA)
Norbert Seyff, FHNW & University Zurich (Switzerland)

KEY QUESTIONS & THEMES OF INTEREST:

CrowdRE 2017 mainly aims at discussing key questions including:

--What are the achievements and contributions of CrowdRE approaches thus far? How do they contribute to improving RE?
--What are the risks of going beyond the borders of the ‘brown field’ domain of RE? To what extent are these risks acceptable? What can be done to mitigate these risks?
--In which parts of the software development lifecycle can CrowdRE play a vital role? Which parts are less suited, and why?
--How can data from such a large group of stakeholders be obtained and interpreted?
--Can a sufficient sample size be reached? In what way can crowd members be motivated to contribute the user feedback we require of them? How can the reliability of individual crowd members and of the data in general be determined?
--Assuming that the stakeholders form a crowd, how are requirements best elicited, documented, validated, negotiated and managed? How are data from the crowd best obtained and interpreted?
--Which limitations and risks are associated with proposed alternatives, and how can they be overcome?
--In what way could techniques from Big Data Analytics be leveraged to analyse heterogeneous and large datasets as a new source for new/changed requirements?
--What are common denominators of existing and em

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