COMPUTING, SOFTWARE, CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE AND APPLICATIONS |
32nd Annual
IEEE International Computer Software and Applications Conference Turku, Finland,
July 28 - August 1, 2008 |
The Second IEEE International Workshop on Requirements Engineering For Services(REFS'08)) |
|
MOTIVATIONS AND BACKGROUND |
||||
Service orientation
is rapidly emerging as the leading network computing paradigm. At the same
time, services have become the dominant form of economic activity and
increasingly the basis for socio-economic organization. The commonalities and
synergies among service concepts across the levels of IT infrastructure and
business and social organization will lead to powerful innovations and new
developments, triggering a call to establish a new discipline of
“Services Science, Management, and Engineering (SSME)”. A common
feature of service orientation across all levels is the need to understand
and characterize what the customer wants, including socio-technical
constraints, and to design services that can meet those requirements
effectively. |
||||
CALL
FOR PAPERS |
||||
Requirements
engineering (RE) has emerged as a critical area in software and systems
engineering, as many systems fail due to poorly understood, ill-defined or
ill-conceived requirements. Much of
the same concepts and techniques could potentially be applied to services,
with the benefit of systematic methods and scientific inquiry. However,
service orientation introduces many new challenges. Service providers and
service users interact much more closely. Knowledge is created and exchanged
among customers and suppliers. Instead of a single set of requirements on a
technical system, there are networks of providers and users, each with
requirements and expectations on each other – some based on tacit
social conventions, and each with requirements on their technical IT systems.
Service design and operation often proceed in parallel, as new knowledge and
experiences are incorporated into service systems and processes on an ongoing
basis. Automated processes are richly interwoven with human action, decision,
and judgment. Some of the interactions will adhere to open standards, while
others may be informally negotiated. There are highly dynamic on-the-fly
network configurations as well as long-term stable relationships. To continue the on-going discussions from the REFS 2007 workshop amongst active researchers and practitioners all over the world, we expect to gather more enthusiastic participants this year in Finland, who will take the opportunity to share their knowledge in intensive informal discussion to develop new ideas, new strategies and new productive networks on topics relevant to requirements for What existing and new requirements engineering methods and techniques are suitable for a service oriented environment? What adaptations, extensions or re-conceptualizations will be needed? How can requirements engineering contribute to a new discipline of services science, management, and engineering? Will service orientation lead to a rethinking of the field of requirements engineering? These are some of the key questions explored at this workshop. |
||||
SCOPE OF THE WORKSHOP AND EXPECTED CONTRIBUTIONS |
||||
The workshop
aims to provide a forum for a highly interactive and in-depth discussion of
all issues related to requirements engineering for services. An objective of
the workshop is to define a research agenda for the area based on the
discussions and contributions from participants. We invite contributions from
researchers and practitioners on a wide range of topics, including but not
limited to: n Service requirements models and
descriptions n Service requirements identification,
elicitation, and acquisition n Service requirements communication,
negotiation, and validation n Service requirements analysis and design
methods n Service engineering and management
processes n Knowledge engineering and management for
Services n Service ontologies, metrics, and
benchmarks n Service design, management and
manufacturing n QoS modeling and evaluation frameworks n Trust, delegation, and negotiation models
for services n Security, privacy, and safety for
services n Services related architecture – Web
Service Architecture, Service-Oriented Architecture n Service enabling technologies n RE techniques for business process
redesign n RE techniques for business model and
value analysis n RE techniques for services discovery and
composition n RE techniques for service quality n Conceptual modeling for services
management and engineering n Empirical evaluation of RE for services n Conceptual frameworks for RE and Services n RE techniques for aligning business
services and computational services n RE techniques for Service-Oriented
Computing & Service-Oriented Architecture n RE techniques for adaptiveness
and agility in services n RE techniques for socio-technical
analysis and design of services n Services and requirements engineering for
pervasive computing and ambient intelligence n RE and SSME techniques for user
experience n RE and SSME techniques for lifecycle
management |
||||
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE |
||||
Marco Aiello, Grigoris Antoniou, FORTH, Mikio Aoyama, Luciano Baresi, Polit. of Carlo Batini, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy Chi-hung Chi, Tsinghua University, China Vincenzo D'Andrea, Schahram Dustdar, David
Edmond, Geoffrey Fox, Jaap Gordijn, Paul Johanesson, Manolis Koubarakis,
National and Kapodistrian Julio Cesar Sampaio do Prado Leite, PUC-Rio, Brazil Xinsheng Mao, IBM Michael Maximilien, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA Massimo Mecella, University of Roma "La Sapienza", Italy Sotirios Liaskos, York University, Canada Enrico Nardelli, University of Roma "Tor Vergata", Italy Selmin Nurcan, University of Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne, France George
Papadopoulos, Dimitris Plexousakis,
FORTH, Pascal van Eck, Haiyan Zhao, Andrea Zisman, |
||||
IMPORTANT DATES |
||||
Paper Abstract Submission: March 1, 2008 Full Paper Submission: March 7, 2008 Paper Notification: March 30, 2008 Camera Ready Paper Submission and Author
Registration: April 30, 2008 |
||||
PAPER SUBMISSION |
||||
Papers must be
submitted electronically via the REFS 2008 Submission
Page. Please follow the instructions posted on the web site. The format
of submitted papers should follow the guidelines for IEEE conference proceedings.
All papers will be carefully reviewed by at least three reviewers. Papers
will be accepted (and can be submitted) as either regular papers, short
papers, or fast abstracts. Acceptance and final category depends on reviewer
feedback. Contribution may include: ·
Full
research papers: 6 pages, up to 2 extra pages for no more than 8 pages total.
Note: there is a 250 USD charge per extra page to complete the paper
registration ·
Short
papers – research-in-progress, industrial experience, problem
description: 4 pages, no extra page allowed ·
Fast
abstract: 2 pages, no extra page allowed ·
Keynote/Invited
paper: if approved/applicable. No more than 6 pages ·
Panel
description and position statement: ONE page. No extra page allowed For Camera-ready
upload, please follow the naming convention on the COMPSAC
submission page. Remember that you
will need to register
and submit your Camera-Ready Copy to both 1.
REFS 2008
Submission Page & 2.
IEEE Conference
Publishing Service for COMPSAC2008. |
||||
PAPER PUBLICATION |
||||
Accepted papers will be published in the Workshop
Proceedings of the 32nd IEEE Computer Software and Applications Conference (COMPSAC 2008). At least one of the authors of each accepted
paper must register as a full participant in the workshop to have the paper
published in the COMPSAC 2008 Proceedings. The authors of a number of selected papers of special merit will be invited to submit a revised and extended version of their papers for possible publication in a special issue in a Journal which is to be determined. |
||||
WORKSHOP LAYOUT |
||||
This one-day workshop will include Keynote(s),
presentation sessions, a moderated panel session, and open discussions on
relevant Requirements Engineering for Services topics. |
||||
WORKSHOP ORGANIZATION |
||||
|
||||
WORKSHOP INFORMATION AND GENERAL INQUIRIES |
||||
Please contact
the publicity chair: Selmin Nurcan
(nurcan[at]univ-paris1.fr) |