학술논문

Naturalistic inquiry and requirements engineering: reconciling their theoretical foundations
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings of ISRE '97: 3rd IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering Requirements engineering Requirements Engineering, 1997., Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Symposium on. :118-127 1997
Subject
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Control systems
Communication system control
Ontologies
Design engineering
Educational institutions
Context awareness
Data engineering
Design methodology
Programmable control
Adaptive control
Language
Abstract
A growing awareness of the need to take into account social and contextual factors requirements engineering (RE) has led to expanded use of naturalistic inquiry (NI) methods, such as ethnography, for capturing relevant data. There is little debate about the potential value of NI to the development of systems; however, most previous discussions have emphasized practical techniques and benefits. Less attention has been given to the ontological and epistemological commitments that a naturalistic research paradigm assume and the extent to which these assumptions conflict with those that pervade RE practice. In this paper we present the axioms that NI. In each case we address both the points of agreement and tension that arise when these axioms are compared with the implicit assumptions upon which RE practice and research methods are based. We illustrate the discussion with specific examples from published sources and our experience.