The 7th International Model–Driven Requirements Engineering (MoDRE) workshop<br>continues to provide a forum to discuss the challenges of Model–Driven<br>Development (MDD) for Requirements Engineering (RE). Building on the interest<br>of MDD for design and implementation, RE may benefit from MDD techniques when<br>properly balancing flexibility for capturing varied user needs with formal<br>rigidity required for model transformations as well as high–level abstraction<br>with information richness. MoDRE seeks to explore those areas of requirements<br>engineering that have not yet been formalized sufficiently to be incorporated<br>into a model–driven development environment as well as how requirements<br>engineering models can benefit from emerging topics in the model–driven<br>community, such as flexible modeling or collaborative modeling. This workshop<br>intends to identify new challenges, discuss on–going work and potential<br>solutions, analyze the strengths and weaknesses of MDD approaches for RE,<br>foster stimulating discussions on the topic, and provide opportunities<br>to apply MDD approaches for RE.<br>TOPICS<br>Submissions are welcome in all workshop topics including (but not limited to)<br>the following:<br>* Modeling languages and metamodels for requirements engineering approaches.<br>* Modeling languages and metamodels for supporting separation of concerns<br>in requirements models.<br>* Modeling languages and metamodels for non–functional requirements.<br>* Modeling languages and metamodels for requirements engineering for<br>specific domains, such as cyber–physical systems or Big Data applications.<br>* Synchronicity and consistency of different requirements models and views.<br>* Requirements models at runtime.<br>* Automatic analysis of requirements models.<br>* Automatic generation of tools for requirements engineering using MDD.<br>* Traceability and correctness of model transformations involving<br>requirements models.<br>* Empirical studies on model–driven requirements engineering.<br>* Simulation of requirements models. Flexible and collaborative modeling<br>in requirements engineering.<br>* Requirements models for simplicity and complementarity.<br>Moreover, industry papers covering topics such as the following are highly<br>welcome:<br>* Industry problems and practices about model–driven requirements engineering.<br>* Success stories about adopting model–driven requirements engineering in<br>industry.<br>* Industrial empirical studies.<br>
Abbrevation
MoDRE
City
Lisbon
Country
Portugal
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract