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Applications of ontologies in requirements engineering: a systematic review of the literature
Authors:Diego Dermeval  Jéssyka Vilela  Ig Ibert Bittencourt  Jaelson Castro  Seiji Isotani  Patrick Brito  Alan Silva
Affiliation:1.Systems and Computing Department,Federal University of Campina Grande,Campina Grande,Brazil;2.Campus Arapiraca,Federal University of Alagoas,Penedo,Brazil;3.Informatics Center,Federal University of Pernambuco,Recife,Brazil;4.Computing Institute,Federal University of Alagoas,Maceió,Brazil;5.Institute of Mathematics and Computational Sciences,University of S?o Paulo,S?o Carlos,Brazil
Abstract:There is an increase use of ontology-driven approaches to support requirements engineering (RE) activities, such as elicitation, analysis, specification, validation and management of requirements. However, the RE community still lacks a comprehensive understanding of how ontologies are used in RE process. Thus, the main objective of this work is to investigate and better understand how ontologies support RE as well as identify to what extent they have been applied to this field. In order to meet our goal, we conducted a systematic literature review (SLR) to identify the primary studies on the use of ontologies in RE, following a predefined review protocol. We then identified the main RE phases addressed, the requirements modelling styles that have been used in conjunction with ontologies, the types of requirements that have been supported by the use of ontologies and the ontology languages that have been adopted. We also examined the types of contributions reported and looked for evidences of the benefits of ontology-driven RE. In summary, the main findings of this work are: (1) there are empirical evidences of the benefits of using ontologies in RE activities both in industry and academy, specially for reducing ambiguity, inconsistency and incompleteness of requirements; (2) the majority of studies only partially address the RE process; (3) there is a great diversity of RE modelling styles supported by ontologies; (4) most studies addressed only functional requirements; (5) several studies describe the use/development of tools to support different types of ontology-driven RE approaches; (6) about half of the studies followed W3C recommendations on ontology-related languages; and (7) a great variety of RE ontologies were identified; nevertheless, none of them has been broadly adopted by the community. Finally, we conclude this work by showing several promising research opportunities that are quite important and interesting but underexplored in current research and practice.
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