4.2 Article

Goal-oriented requirements engineering: an extended systematic mapping study

Journal

REQUIREMENTS ENGINEERING
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 133-160

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00766-017-0280-z

Keywords

Goal model; Systematic mapping study; Goal-oriented requirements engineering; GORE

Funding

  1. ERC [267856]
  2. ERC Marie Skodowska-Curie Intra European Fellowship [PIEF-GA-2013-627489]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. European Union [653642-VisiON]
  5. Generalitat Valenciana [APOSTD/2014/064]
  6. SESAR Joint Undertaking under European Union [699306]
  7. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [699306] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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Over the last two decades, much attention has been paid to the area of goal-oriented requirements engineering (GORE), where goals are used as a useful conceptualization to elicit, model, and analyze requirements, capturing alternatives and conflicts. Goal modeling has been adapted and applied to many sub-topics within requirements engineering (RE) and beyond, such as agent orientation, aspect orientation, business intelligence, model-driven development, and security. Despite extensive efforts in this field, the RE community lacks a recent, general systematic literature review of the area. In this work, we present a systematic mapping study, covering the 246 top-cited GORE-related conference and journal papers, according to Scopus. Our literature map addresses several research questions: we classify the types of papers (e.g., proposals, formalizations, meta-studies), look at the presence of evaluation, the topics covered (e.g., security, agents, scenarios), frameworks used, venues, citations, author networks, and overall publication numbers. For most questions, we evaluate trends over time. Our findings show a proliferation of papers with new ideas and few citations, with a small number of authors and papers dominating citations; however, there is a slight rise in papers which build upon past work (implementations, integrations, and extensions). We see a rise in papers concerning adaptation/variability/evolution and a slight rise in case studies. Overall, interest in GORE has increased. We use our analysis results to make recommendations concerning future GORE research and make our data publicly available.

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