RE’24 welcomes original research papers focusing on traditional areas of requirements engineering, as well as new ideas which challenge the boundaries of the area.

Accepted Papers

Title
AI-enabled Regulatory Change Analysis of Legal Requirements
Research Papers
Defining a Model for Content Requirements from the Law: an Experience Report
Research Papers
Deriving Domain Models from User Stories: Human vs. Machines
Research Papers
“Do you have time for a quick call?”: Exploring Remote and Hybrid Requirements Engineering Practices and Challenges in Industry
Research Papers
Explanations in Everyday Software Systems: Towards a Taxonomy for Explainability Needs
Research Papers
Pre-print
GlobalTagNet: A Graph-Based Framework for Multi-Label Classification in GitHub Issues
Research Papers
How do practitioners reason about security requirements? An interview study
Research Papers
Keeping Behavioral Programs Alive: Specifying and Executing Liveness Requirements
Research Papers
Lessons from the Use of Natural Language Inference (NLI) in Requirement Engineering Tasks
Research Papers
Pre-print
Lessons Learned from Persona Usage in Requirements Engineering Practice
Research Papers
Normative Requirements Operationalization with Large Language Models
Research Papers
ReqCompletion: Domain-Enhanced Automatic Completion for Software Requirements
Research Papers
Requirements Classification for Traceability Link Recovery
Research Papers
Pre-print
Requirements Satisfiability with In-Context Learning
Research Papers
Requirements Strategy for Managing Human Factors in Agile Automated Vehicle Development
Research Papers
Scalable Redundancy Detection for Real-Time Requirements
Research Papers
Utilizing Process Models in the Requirements Engineering Process Through Model2Text Transformation
Research Papers

Building upon last year’s theme of redefining requirements engineering (RE), this year we invite you to sketch the future of RE and explore uncharted territories.

Embracing the theme Exploring New Horizons: Expanding the Frontiers of Requirements Engineering, we invite submissions that challenge existing perceptions of RE, shed light on its intersections with other software engineering activities, fields, and endeavors, and push beyond its established boundaries.

Suggested Paper Topics

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Requirements Elicitation, Specification, and Analysis
  • Requirements Validation and Verification
  • Requirements Change Management
  • Traceability and Impact Analysis
  • Requirements Quality and Metrics
  • Requirements Tooling and Automation
  • Software Requirements and Architecture
  • Requirements-Driven Quality Assurance
  • Formal RE
  • RE and Modeling
  • Requirements in Software Configuration, Maintenance, and Evolution
  • Requirements in Agile Development
  • Requirements for DevOps
  • RE4AI and AI4RE
  • Creativity in RE
  • Cognitive, Emotional, and Social Aspects of RE
  • Distributed and Collaborative RE
  • Community-based RE (e.g., open source, crowdsourcing)
  • Responsible RE (e.g., ethics, privacy)
  • RE for Green and Sustainable Technologies
  • Requirements and Legal/Regulatory Compliance
  • Diversity, inclusion, and social concerns in RE
  • Domain-specific RE (e.g., RE4IoT, RE4VR, Quantum RE, RE for Blockchain)
  • Advanced Technologies for RE (e.g., IoT4RE, VR4RE)
  • RE Education and Training
  • Prompt-based Engineering
  • The Next New Thing… … embrace the challenge and surprise the RE community!

Review Criteria

Each paper submitted to the Research Track will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

Novelty: Novelty of contributed solutions, problem formulations, methodologies, theories, and/or evaluations, that is, the extent to which the paper is sufficiently original with respect to the state-of-the-art.

Rigor: Soundness, clarity, and depth of the research contribution.

Relevance: Significance and/or potential impact of the research to the field of RE.

Verifiability and Transparency: Extent to which the paper includes sufficient information on the methods and/or empirical findings to understand how the contribution was achieved. While not mandatory, including information on how the authors support independent verification or replication of the paper’s claimed contributions is encouraged.

Presentation: Clarity and readability of the paper.

Challenge: “Expanding the Frontiers of RE”

In line with this year’s theme, we invite authors to reflect on how the work sprouting from their contribution can help (re)shape the frontiers of RE. Authors interested in participating in the challenge competition will have the opportunity to add their reflections in a dedicated box in the EasyChair submission page. Challenge Criteria

Novelty to RE: Novelty of the idea to the RE community (regardless of its novelty in other fields).

Potential Impact: Extent to which the contribution may impact future research in and practice of RE.

Feasibility: Extent to which the proposed direction can be realistically implemented and applied to RE.

The format of your paper must strictly adhere to the IEEEtran Proceedings Format. LaTeX users: please use the LaTeX class file IEEEtran v1.8 and the following configuration (without option ‘compsoc’ or ‘compsocconf’): \documentclass[conference]{IEEEtran}

Word users: please use this Word template. See the official IEEE Templates page for more information.

Please make sure that your submission:

  • does not exceed the respective page limit specified in the track call
  • is in PDF format,
  • is in letter page size,
  • does not have page numbers,
  • has all fonts embedded in the PDF file,
  • uses only scalable font types (like Type 1, TrueType) — bit-mapped font types (like Type 3) are not acceptable,
  • has all figures embedded in vector graphics (if not possible, use a high-resolution bitmap format of at least 300 dpi; do not use JPG, but a lossless format like PNG or GIF),
  • has all text in figures and tables large enough and readable when printed,
  • has a caption for every figure or table,
  • has the title and all headings properly capitalized
  • has no orphans and widows (cf. Section Help), and
  • does not use footnote references in the abstract.

Papers must be submitted electronically in PDF format via the RE’24 EasyChair system. Select the RE’24 Research Track for your submission.

In order to guide the reviewing process, all authors who intend to submit a paper must first submit the title and abstract. Abstracts should describe explicit coverage of context, objectives, methods, and results and conclusions, and should not exceed 200 words.

Papers must not exceed 10 pages for the main body and up to 2 additional pages for the references. Submissions must be written in English and formatted according to the IEEE formatting instructions. Submissions must be double-blinded in conformance with the instructions below.

Please note: Papers that exceed the length specification, are not formatted correctly, or are not properly double-blinded will be desk-rejected without review. Only full paper submissions will be peer-reviewed. Abstract-only submissions will be discarded without further notice after the submission deadline. Accepted papers may require editing for clarity prior to publication and presentation. They will appear in the IEEE Digital Library.

Instructions for the Double-Blind Review Process

The RE’24 Research track will use a double-blind reviewing process. The goal of double-blind reviewing is to ensure that the reviewers can read and review your paper without having to know who any of the authors are, and hence avoid related bias. Of course, authors are allowed and encouraged to submit papers that build on their previously published work.

In order to prepare your submission for double-blind reviewing, please follow the instructions given below.

  1. Omit all names and affiliations of authors from the title page, but keep sufficient space to re-introduce them in the final version should the paper be accepted.
  2. Do not include any acknowledgements that might disclose your identity. Leave space in your submission to add such acknowledgements when the paper has been accepted.
  3. Refer to your own work in the third person, as you would normally do with the work of others. You should not change the names of your own tools, approaches, or systems, since this would clearly compromise the review process; it would also violate the constraint that “no change is made to any technical details of the work”. Instead, refer to the authorship or provenance of tools, approaches, or systems in the third person, so that it is credible that another author could have written your paper. In particular, never blind references.
  4. When providing supplementary material (e.g., tools, data repositories, source code, study protocols), do this via a website that does not disclose your identity. Please refer to the Open Science Policy in the Call for Papers with guidelines on how to anonymize such content.
  5. Adhere to instruction 3 when citing previously published own work.
  6. Remove identification metadata from the PDF file before submission (in Adobe Acrobat Reader, you can check their presence with File Properties, or Ctrl-D).

Important Policy Announcements

Papers submitted to RE’24 must be original. They will be reviewed under the assumption that they do not contain plagiarized material and have not been published nor submitted for review elsewhere while under consideration for RE’24.

RE’24 follows the IEEE policies for cases of double submission and plagiarism