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» Optimal-Constraint Lexicons for Requirements Specifications
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REFSQ
2007
Springer
13 years 10 months ago
Optimal-Constraint Lexicons for Requirements Specifications
Abstract. Constrained Natural Languages (CNLs) are becoming an increasingly popular way of writing technical documents such as requirements specifications. This is because CNLs aim...
Stephen Boyd, Didar Zowghi, Vincenzo Gervasi
NAACL
2010
13 years 2 months ago
The viability of web-derived polarity lexicons
We examine the viability of building large polarity lexicons semi-automatically from the web. We begin by describing a graph propagation framework inspired by previous work on con...
Leonid Velikovich, Sasha Blair-Goldensohn, Kerry H...
RE
2008
Springer
13 years 4 months ago
Reusing Terminology for Requirements Specifications from WordNet
In order to make requirements comprehensible to humans and as unambiguous as possible, a glossary and/or domain model is needed for defining the terminology used. Unless these are...
Katharina Wolter, Michal Smialek, Daniel Bildhauer...
WSC
2007
13 years 7 months ago
Conceptual modeling of information exchange requirements based on ontological means
Unambiguous definition of the information exchanged between distributed systems is a necessary requirement for simulation system interoperability. The ontological spectrum categor...
Andreas Tolk, Charles D. Turnitsa
AOSD
2009
ACM
13 years 8 months ago
Semantic vs. syntactic compositions in aspect-oriented requirements engineering: an empirical study
Most current aspect composition mechanisms rely on syntactic references to the base modules or wildcard mechanisms quantifying over such syntactic references in pointcut expressio...
Ruzanna Chitchyan, Phil Greenwood, Américo ...