A Research Design for Asynchronous Negotiation of Software Requirements for an Emergency Response Information System
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
1-1-2004
Abstract
Negotiation of software requirements is a critical phase of the software development process. Multiple stakeholders and/or organizations must agree to a final set of requirements for implementation. With global distributed software development increasingly prevalent, the study of asynchronous negotiation and collaboration is valuable. Emergency response activities and accompanying information management have been maturing over the years but with recent events, the development has been accelerated. A research design for asynchronous negotiation of software requirements for an emergency response system is discussed. This paper describes a research in progress which examines the negotiation of multiple emergency response stakeholders, striving to agree to a set of common software requirements to meet their needs for their organization.
Identifier
84898396615 (Scopus)
Publication Title
10th Americas Conference on Information Systems Amcis 2004
First Page
3426
Last Page
3432
Recommended Citation
Campbell, Catherine Lowry; Turoff, Murray; Van DeWalle, Bartel; and Deek, Fadi P., "A Research Design for Asynchronous Negotiation of Software Requirements for an Emergency Response Information System" (2004). Faculty Publications. 20513.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/20513
