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An empirical investigation of capture and access for software requirements activities

Published: 07 May 2005 Publication History

Abstract

Researchers have been exploring the ubiquitous capture and access of meetings for the past decade. Yet, few evaluations of these systems have demonstrated the benefits from using recorded meeting information. We are exploring the capture and access of Knowledge Acquisition sessions, discussions to understand the problems and requirements that feed systems development. In this paper, we evaluate the use of these recordings in creating a requirements document. We show that recordings of discussions will not be utilized without appropriate structure and indexing. Our study demonstrates how captured information can be used in such a task and the potential benefits that use may afford.

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Cited By

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  • (2009)Designing a Peer Reviewing Tool on Lecture Video with Handwritten AnnotationProceedings of the Symposium on Human Interface 2009 on ConferenceUniversal Access in Human-Computer Interaction. Part I: Held as Part of HCI International 200910.1007/978-3-642-02556-3_4(31-39)Online publication date: 14-Jul-2009

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Published In

cover image Guide Proceedings
GI '05: Proceedings of Graphics Interface 2005
May 2005
256 pages
ISBN:1568812655

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  • CHCCS: The Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society

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Canadian Human-Computer Communications Society

Waterloo, Canada

Publication History

Published: 07 May 2005

Author Tags

  1. capture and access
  2. evaluation
  3. knowledge acquisition
  4. requirements specification
  5. ubiquitous computing

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Overall Acceptance Rate 206 of 508 submissions, 41%

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  • (2009)Designing a Peer Reviewing Tool on Lecture Video with Handwritten AnnotationProceedings of the Symposium on Human Interface 2009 on ConferenceUniversal Access in Human-Computer Interaction. Part I: Held as Part of HCI International 200910.1007/978-3-642-02556-3_4(31-39)Online publication date: 14-Jul-2009

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