Title
Requirements Engineering for e-Business Systems: Integrating Jackson Problem Diagrams with Goal Modeling and BPM
Abstract
Jackson problem diagrams, goal modeling, and business process modeling (BPM) are employed in a requirements engineering approach that captures both business strategy and process requirements for e-business systems. As a means of linking abstract, high-level business requirements to low-level system requirements, we leverage the paradigm of projection in both problem diagrams and goal models simultaneously. We use Jackson context diagram to describe the business model domain context while goal modeling is used to represent both requirements and to describe the objectives of business strategy. Role activity diagrams are used to describe business processes in detail where needed. The feasibility of our approach is shown by a proof-of-concept case study.
Year
DOI
Venue
2004
10.1109/APSEC.2004.84
APSEC
Keywords
Field
DocType
integrating jackson problem diagrams,business process,business strategy,jackson problem diagram,high-level business requirement,business process modeling,goal modeling,requirements engineering,e-business systems,goal model,requirements engineering approach,business model domain context,jackson context diagram,formal verification,proof of concept,business model,electronic commerce,system integration,activity diagram,requirement engineering,business process model,formal specification
Artifact-centric business process model,Software engineering,Systems engineering,Computer science,Process modeling,Business domain,Business requirements,Business process modeling,Goal modeling,Business rule,Business Process Model and Notation
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
0-7695-2245-9
14
0.80
References 
Authors
14
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Steven J. Bleistein132216.95
Karl Cox2715.77
June M. Verner3125575.85